2019 NFL Draft Tracker

The 2019 Draft has concluded.

Check below for the complete rundown and analysis of all of the picks and trades.

Draft Tracker

Trades

Rd 7

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215

Terry Beckner, Jr. DL, MIZZOU

Height: 6-4, Weight: 296

A poor combine likely hurt Beckner's stock. At Missouri, he demonstrated powerful hands and explosive linear bursts to sneak into the backfield. He can be complacent at times as a rusher and play too upright. Still, great value here for Tampa Bay.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Beckner is a refined block-disengager with good burst who has trouble sustaining speed through the play. -- CT

Nick Allegretti OL, ILL

Height: 6-4, Weight: 310

Allegretti's versatility and football intelligence likely led to him being drafted. He lacks NFL-caliber physical abilities and refinement as a blocker, but the Chiefs obviously saw him enough to give him a shot at competing inside.

C-

Kris Boyd CB, TEXAS

Height: 5-11, Weight: 201

Boyd is a feisty outside cornerback with enough quick-twitch movement skills to move down into the slot. He knows when the ball is arriving and attacks. He had a strong combine. The Vikings have a great track record drafting corners.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

A physical player who can sometimes get in trouble when he's out of position, drawing defensive pass interference penalties. Boyd ran an impressive 4.45 40 at the combine though questions about his flexibility could see him slip down draft boards. -- RW

Mike Weber RB, OHIOST

Height: 5-10, Weight: 211

Weber has 'Ohio State speed' and while he never secured lead back duties in Columbus he made the most of his touches thanks to that speed and good balance through contact. A more traditional backup for Ezekiel Elliott than earlier pick Tony Pollard.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Weber has a smaller-scat back body and flashes springiness in his step to bounce to the outside where he can exhibit decent speed and a well-timed stiff arm on occasion. He misses holes due to below-average vision. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Derwin Gray OL, MD

Height: 6-4, Weight: 320

Gray had a strangely bad combine because he moves very well for his large size on the field. While not always the prettiest in pass protection, Gray consistently gets in done and is under control but quick in space and can find linebackers at the second level.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Gray is somewhat sluggish in his movements but just athletic enough to get the job done as a pass protector. Like Donovan Smith, Gray's girth and length really help to mask athletic deficiencies. Better on pass plays than paving lanes for the run, Gray has a chance to land in the middle of the draft and start at left tackle early in his career. -- CT

A-

Kerrith Whyte, Jr. RB, FAU

Height: 5-10, Weight: 200

Whyte is a home-run hitter with major speed down the field and the ability to brush off weak tackle attempts at the second level. The Bears made running back a priority with their first pick, but they come back with more depth at the position here.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

No analysis available.

2018 College Stats

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Jordan Brown CB, SDST

Height: 6-0, Weight: 201

Brown has great size for the position, can really run and loaded the stat sheet in the pass breakup department at South Dakota State. His change of direction skills will be tested in the pros, but this could be a steal for Cincinnati.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Brown is a bigger, sleek outside cornerback who can really run but plays relaxed a bit too often. Need to see more plant-and-drive explosiveness from him. -- CT

Isaac Nauta TE, UGA

Height: 6-3, Weight: 244

The Lions started the draft with a tight end and add a depth option late. Nauta never lived up to hype as a big-time recruit and had a poor pre-draft process at the combine and his pro day. He flashed in rare instances as a receiver in some big games at Georgia.

C

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Nauta was a big recruit but failed to live up to expectations at Georgia. I don't think he's a liability in any area. I didn't see anything close to resembling a trump card to his game, although he can explode off the line as a receiver. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Darryl Johnson, Jr. EDGE, NCAT

Height: 6-6, Weight: 253

Johnson was one of my favorite small-school edge rushers because of his length, springiness, and most importantly, his collection of pass-rushing moves. Good bend too. At 6-foot-6 and 253 pounds, he has some room to grow into his frame and must get stronger.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Johnson, a super-sleeper from North Carolina A&T, is tall and slender with high-end explosiveness and somewhat frequent snaps demonstrating stellar pass-rushing moves but very limited power. He's a situational guy early in his career as he builds mass in the weight room. -- CT

Ty Summers LB, TCU

Height: 6-1, Weight: 241

Summers makes explosive moves all over the field, when flashing to make a tackle on an outside run play or when breaking on out route. His tackling leaves a lot to be desired but with a more methodical approach, Summers can be a steal because of his athleticism.

B+

Jimmy Moreland CB, JMAD

Height: 5-10, Weight: 179

Moreland plays larger than his size and is a twitchy, playmaker who was always making big plays at the small-school level. Don't be surprised when he makes the team and contributes early. Washington continues to have a great draft.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Get Moreland on the field as your nickel corner. He's an assertive, twitchy play-maker who seemingly always finds the football in the air. Loose hips and quick feet. -- CT

Tommy Sweeney TE, BC

Height: 6-4, Weight: 251

Sweeney is a jack of all trades but a master of none. No standout portion of his game. He has experience in-line as a blocker but didn't improve in that area as his college career progressed. Adequate receiver in the short to intermediate area.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Adequate in all phases of the game. Spectacular in none. Experience in-line as a blocker and solid in that area. Reliable pass-catcher who's a big target but not a true seam-stretcher or YAC tight end. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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PJ Johnson DL, ARIZ

Height: 6-3, Weight: 335

Johnson is an enormous defensive lineman who's best in run-stopping situations and can overwhelm with his power. He could have trouble finding playing time with the solid group Detroit already has in place.

B

Quinton Bell DE, PRARIE

Height: 6-4, Weight: 220

Bell made one of the strangest position conversions you'll ever see in college, going from wide receiver to defensive end. It's certainly a long-term project for the Raiders. Figure on him showing up on special teams.

D

Alize Mack TE, ND

Mack is a large target at tight end who proved to have explosive athleticism at the combine. He leaves a little to be desired in terms of separation and yards after the catch.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Looks like an NFL tight end but he's only adequate as a blocker and can be overwhelmed when blocking inline. Mack is a hands catcher with ability to pluck ball out of the air but also disappeared for long stretches with little/no impact during games last season. Smooth getting in and out of breaks. Has no problem creating separation, especially against LBs, but often goes down at first contact. -- RW

2018 College Stats

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George Asafo-Adjei OL, UK

Height: 6-5, Weight: 315

Battled tested in the SEC, this Kentucky blocker has swing tackle written all over him. He isn't a plus athlete but battles hard on every snap. The Giants certainly could use him turning into an option on the right side.

D+

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Myles Gaskin RB, WASH

Height: 5-9, Weight: 205

Gaskin was a major overachiever his entire college career at Washington and is a crafty, smooth runner who runs with awesome balance and subtle but efficient wiggle. He could have a chance at sticking in Miami.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Small but blessed with lightning quick reaction to what's in front of him and good burst and wiggle, Justin Forsett stuck around the NFL for nine seasons. Gaskin is comparably sized and talented. He repeatedly finds creases you don't think are there and the next thing you know, he's at 100 yards for the game. I can see him having a long stint in the NFL. -- CT

John Ursua WR, HAWAII

Height: 5-10, Weight: 175

Ursua is a fun slot receiver with a lot of production on his resume. He's an older prospect who could struggle beating press at the line in the pros, but the Seahawks saw enough to give up a 2020 pick to get him.

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Stephen Denmark CB, VALDST

Height: 6-4, Weight: 216

This is the perfect time of the draft to take a prospect like Denmark. At around 6-foot-4 and 220 pounds, he's an explosive defensive back who lacks mirroring skills or quick processing ability in zone.

A-

Dillon Mitchell WR, OREG

Height: 6-1, Weight: 197

Mitchell was Justin Herbert's go-to target in 2018, and he ran under 4.50 at the combine. He tracks the ball awesome downfield and is very elusive after the catch. The Vikings may have found yet another overlooked weapon at receiver.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

As everyone turned their attention to Oregon quarterback Justin Herbert in 2018, Mitchell was clearly his go-to target in every game, finishing the year with 75 receptions for over 1,100 yards with 11 touchdowns. He flashed in every way possible: down the field, in space on underneath routes, and near the sidelines as a chain-mover. He's an ultra-flexible wideout with high-level juking ability to beat press at the line or leave defenders whiffing in the open field. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Jackson Barton OL, UTAH

Height: 6-7, Weight: 310

Barton isn't a stellar athlete but he's one of the most under control tackle in this class, and he has serious NFL tackle size. Plus ability as a pass blocker. He has the profile of someone you want to gamble on in the seventh round.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

At 6-foot-7 with 34-inch arms, Barton has NFL tackle size and length. His pass-blocking skills are above-average, as he's quick in his kick slide and patient with his punch. Needs to add weight and improve his leg churn and accuracy as a run blocker. Swing tackle material with outside chance to start eventually. -- CT

Jalen Jelks EDGE, OREG

Height: 6-5, Weight: 256

Jelks is a tall, sleek defensive line tweener seriously lacking power. He must be given the opportunity to attack, and he has an effective inside move. With Demarcus Lawrence extended, the Cowboys can afford to use Jelks in small doses.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Jelks is a tweener who produced well on the inside but doesn't have the frame for it in the NFL. As a senior, he played on the edge more often, and while he's a twitchy athlete, he's not exactly bendy around the corner. His inside move is tremendous and will help him collapse the pocket in the pros. -- CT

Cortez Broughton DL, CINCY

Height: 6-2, Weight: 293

Finally given the opportunity to rush inside at defensive tackle as a senior, Broughton had 18 tackles for loss thanks to a lightning quick first step and low center of gravity power. He's a plus athlete for the position and has loose hips after time spent on the edge early in his college career.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Broughton is a big draft sleeper with amazing burst off the ball, high-end speed-to-power conversion, and fluid hips. He played out of position on the edge in 2017 but erupted with 18.5 tackles for loss and seven sacks on the inside in 2018. -- CT

Nick Scott S, PSU

Height: 5-11, Weight: 202

Scott doesn't have great size for the safety spot, but after sitting behind some talented defensive backs, he was a reliable contributor to Penn State's run-stopping efforts and made some plays in coverage.

C

Kaden Elliss LB, IDAHO

Height: 6-3, Weight: 240

Elliss jumped onto the draft radar with a ridiculous pro day. He was very productive at Idaho from his off-ball linebacker spot and at times played close to the line as a SAM linebacker. The Saints finally add some depth at linebacker in this draft.

B+

Chris Slayton DL, CUSE

Slayton is a high-motor, heavy-handed defensive tackle who can throttle offensive guards backward but lacks athleticism and pass-rushing moves.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Active, one-gap defensive tackle with good hand work who needs to get more powerful with them to succeed in the NFL. High motor will make him a favorite with his defensive coordinator. Athleticism is not up to starting NFL standards. -- CT

Javon Patterson OL, MISS

Height: 6-3, Weight: 307

Patterson was an unspectacular yet solid guard at Ole Miss for multiple seasons. He doesn't have ideal length and must pack some weight onto his frame, but he's the type of guy that can emerge with the right coaching.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Great lateral movement for his size. Loose hips. Needs to get more powerful in his anchor. Initiates contact but is mostly under control. Not much of a waist-bender. -- CT

Olabisi Johnson WR, COLOST

Height: 6-0, Weight: 204

Johnson was a consistent possession receiver at Colorado State and had a stellar but overlooked combine. but it'll be difficult to stand out. I'm not sure the Vikings needed to take two Round 7 receivers in this draft.

C

Draft Prospect Outlook

No analysis available.

2018 College Stats

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Joshua Miles OL, MRGNST

Height: 6-5, Weight: 314

One of the most linearly explosive small-school tackles in this class. His great size and immense length make him an ideal project up front, and the Cardinals need to develop some long-term answers on the offensive line.

B-

Michael Dogbe DL, TEMPLE

Height: 6-3, Weight: 275

While his film is inconsistent, when he's on, Dogbe can be unstoppable because of his burst and strong hands he uses well. This is a great find for the Cardinals at the end of the draft, and I like his chances of making the team.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Dogbe is an roller-coaster of a player. On one series, he's unblockable thanks to a strong punch and counter or a lightning quick first step. The next series, his motor idles, and he's stuck to every blocker that touches him. -- CT

Austin Cutting LS, AF

Height: 6-3, Weight: 245

If I don't advocate drafting punters, I definitely don't advocate drafting long snappers. This is a guy the team could have more than likely picked up as an undrafted free agent, but when you trade back as many times as the Vikings did, you have to use the picks on someone.

D+

Dakota Allen LB, TXTECH

Height: 6-1, Weight: 232

Allen isn't very fast but he's ultra-quick and has plenty of experience roaming in space in the Big 12. He reads the direction of the offensive play quickly, gets to the football in a hurry against the run, and has the skill set to become a solid zone coverage defender.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Allen doesn't waste any time or movements en route to the football. He's comfortable playing in space coming from Texas Tech. -- CT

Ken Webster CB, MISS

Height: 5-11, Weight: 203

Webster battled injuries at Ole Miss yet recovered remarkably to put on a show at the combine. He has outside corner and safety versatility and has great size. A nice sleeper for the Patriots at the end of the draft.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Squatty outside corner who tested tremendously at the combine but is a better athlete than he is a cornerback at this point. Inconsistent at the line of scrimmage and slower reaction to receiver's breaks leads to consistent separation. Tough player who battled through multiple injuries in college.

Jordan Brailford EDGE, OKLAST

Height: 6-3, Weight: 252

Brailford looks the part of a powerful outside linebacker and was used as a blitzer often in a productive 2018 at Oklahoma State. He tested well at the combine and should fit in well with Washington's scheme.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

High-energy rusher used often in blitzing situations. Decent bend and speed on the outside but his hand work and counter reportoire is really not there. Developmental type because of his stature and motor. -- CT

Caleb Wilson TE, UCLA

Wilson won't make defenders miss in space and is a linear tight end, but he can threaten the seam thanks to serious speed. As Mr. Irrevelants go, you could definitely do a lot worse.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Fast, seam-stretching tight end who was Josh Rosen's go-to target in 2017. Good hands. His yards after the catch creation comes mostly on his linear speed than elusiveness in space. Not much of a blocker. Essentially a big receiver. -- CT

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Kyler Murray QB, OKLA

Height: 5-10, Weight: 207

He is intriguing. I like the way he can throw the football, but he did it in an offense with five guys that are going to get drafted, in front of him. There is a lot to like, but he has bust potential written all over him. I do not like quarterbacks that stand 5-10.

C-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Off-the-charts athleticism make him one of the most explosive players in this draft class. Will draw comparisons to Russell Wilson but is a better athlete. Can play in the pocket and doesn't look to run if first progression isn't there. Shows good accuracy and touch, and can make every throw. His height (he measured 5-foot-10 at the combine) will be the biggest concern for some NFL teams but Murray could still be the first-overall pick, following in the footsteps of former Oklahoma teammate and Hesiman Trophy winner Baker Mayfield. -- RW

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Nick Bosa EDGE, OHIOST

Height: 6-4, Weight: 266

Love this pick for the Niners. They are building something special on that defensive line. Bottom line is they are going to get after the quarterback. Love this pick. There are concerns about durability, but Nick did the smart thing by checking out early last season.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Well-built, bendy, explosive, hand-work master who can win a variety of ways when flying around the corner. Sets a strong edge and can disengage from blockers to make plays against the run near the line of scrimmage. Core muscle injury is slightly concerning, but otherwise, he's a polished, instant impact rookie. -- CT

Quinnen Williams DL, BAMA

Height: 6-3, Weight: 303

I love this pick. I could make a case for Josh Allen as the Jets needed more of a pure pass rusher, but this kid will be dominant. People in the league have compared him to Reggie White, let's slow down a bit on that, but this kid is a dominating player.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Williams has one of the quickest first steps in this draft class. He was perpetually in backfield last season, blowing up the run and pass game. He's a pocket-collapser with unmatched athleticism who regularly defeats double-teams and has a legit case to be the first player taken in the 2019 NFL Draft. -- RW

Clelin Ferrell EDGE, CLEM

Height: 6-4, Weight: 264

If you get good Clelin Ferrell, you are getting an 'A' player. If you get bad Clelin Ferrell, you are getting an 'F' player. Too much inconsistency from him. They need edge players, but I think there were better options here. I'd have taken Josh Allen or even Ed Oliver.

C

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

A dominant college career, Ferrell has an explosive first step, good change of direction and a high motor. He needs to work on getting stronger but despite concerns about flexibility, he has the athleticism to regularly turn the corner on offensive tackles and get to the quarterback. -- RW

Devin White LB, LSU

Height: 6-0, Weight: 237

I think he's a good player and I think he's gonna add to that defense. He's a three-down player and can run, but he's an off-the-ball linebacker and position value is changing a little bit. I would have taken Josh Allen here or even Ed Oliver.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

A physical tackler with sideline-to-sideline speed, White is exactly what NFL teams are looking for in a linebacker. Sometimes a step slow on play-action reads -- but can often make up for it with speed, quickness and athleticism. -- RW

Daniel Jones QB, DUKE

Height: 6-5, Weight: 221

I wanted to give this pick an 'F.' I like Daniel Jones, but I just don't like him in this spot. They must have gotten intelligence that another team was going to take him before 17. I like him, but not at No. 6. It's a strange pick this early.

D

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Tall, decently athletic pocket passer with a quick release, good arm, impressive short accuracy, and flashes of pinpoint ball placement downfield. Strange tendency to fade away from momentum of his upper body, which comes from inability to reset his feet far too often when his first read isn't there. Hangs onto the ball in precarious situations too often or forces it downfield. -- CT

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Josh Allen EDGE, UK

Height: 6-5, Weight: 262

The Jaguars didn't think he would be here. They thought he would go at 3 or 4 or 5. I love this pick. Their identity is defense. I like this pick, they could have went in a different direction, but he fell to them and they took him.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Returned to Kentucky for senior season and added 15 pounds of muscle. Has a quick first step -- often first off the ball -- to regularly beat offensive tackles -- but can also beat them with power. Can occasionally get engulfed by blockers but effectively uses hands to win more times than not. Also has the athleticism to drop into coverage, which he was asked to do in college. - RW

T.J. Hockenson TE, IOWA

Height: 6-5, Weight: 251

He's a good player, but let's stop with all the comparisons to Rob Gronkowski. He's a good blocker, but nowhere near as good as Gronkowski. He's more George Kittle. Can he rush the passer because the Lions can't rush the passer?

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Young, dynamic pass-catching option with the athleticism and speed to threaten the seam and make catches well outside his frame. Immense leg churn as a blocker and very accurate finding linebackers in space. Probably needs to add more strength at the next level to control defensive ends at the point of attack, but is arguably the most exciting, new-age tight end to enter the league over the past few drafts. -- CT

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Ed Oliver DL, HOU

Height: 6-2, Weight: 287

I thought he was misused at Houston. I think this kid is going to be special at the next level. He is not Aaron Donald, I don't like that comparison. He plays a lot like John Randle and Randle was a Hall of Famer. This kid is going to be a good player for Buffalo.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Played over the center in college and regularly dominated, but will move to 3-technique in the NFL where he have more opportunities to shoot gaps. Low center of gravity, nonstop motor, unparalleled get-off and the leverage to regularly win at the line of scrimmage, Oliver is a top-5 talent. -- RW

Devin Bush LB, MICH

Height: 5-11, Weight: 234

This is the replacement for what happened to Ryan Shazier, who had a tragic injury and might never play football again. This kid can fill that role for the Steelers. They gave up a little too much though (picks 20 and 52 overall and a 2020 third round pick). He better be special.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Fantastic athlete as evidenced by his 4.43 40 at the combine. Can line up in slot to cover tight ends and shows ability to change direction when going from rush to coverage. Solid tackler who has second gear when in pursuit. Has sideline-to-sideline speed and a high motor, and is a likely first-round pick. -- RW

Jonah Williams OL, BAMA

Height: 6-4, Weight: 302

The National Championship Game against Clemson was overblown. He did some good things against Clelin Ferrell. He's a plug and play. The best part of this pick is it gets the spinning top off the field in Bobby Hart, who will no longer be the right tackle in Cincinnati. He'll be a consistent starter in the National Football League.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Played right tackle as a freshman before moving to left tackle, where he was consistently one of the best players on Alabama's offense. Regularly shows good footwork, is rarely out of position, but he'll need to mitigate concerns about his athleticism to play blindside protector in the NFL. His future could be at guard though we like him a lot at tackle. -- RW

Rashan Gary DL, MICH

Height: 6-4, Weight: 277

He's very athletic. He's a specimen, but it doesn't translate on the field. Where's the production? He could end up being a great pick or could be a bust. There's no in-between. He's either feast or famine. There is a shoulder concern. He might have to have shoulder surgery.

C-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Quick first step for a big man. Insane athlete who played out of position at Michigan. Best suited as a defensive end in the NFL where his rip move can be hard to counter for offensive tackles. -- RW

Christian Wilkins DL, CLEM

Height: 6-3, Weight: 315

This is my favorite pick of the entire draft so far. Love this pick. I think this kid is going to be a star. I was all over Grady Jarrett when he was picked and I think Wilkins could be even better. This is a good building block for Brian Flores and his staff.

A+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Thick, muscular, well-rounded defensive tackle who can carry out multiple responsibilities up front, whether it be one-gapping or eating blockers. Good, not great athleticism but is a polished hand work defender who can overpower guards and centers. Should be a solid asset for the team that drafts him for his entire career. -- CT

Chris Lindstrom OL, BC

Height: 6-4, Weight: 307

I like the pick. When Matt Ryan is not protected from the interior, he has real problems. They got a guy that's going to be a fixture on the interior there for a long time. I think Lindstrom is a feisty guy. Good solid pick by the Falcons.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Somewhat compact guard prospect with tackle feet who can fire multiple punches with good pop but isn't necessarily heavy-handed. Strengths of his game are his awareness to find work, stunt recognition and his light, always moving feet. Could stand to get a stronger anchor and add more weight but projects to a starting role at guard early in his career. -- CT

Dwayne Haskins QB, OHIOST

Height: 6-3, Weight: 231

I think he's the best quarterback in this draft and it's a great pick for the Redskins. Getting a cheap quarterback to come in and push to start right away is a great move. Love this pick by the Redskins. Like Kyler Murray he's a one-year wonder, but there's a lot of potential here.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Haskins was dominant during his 2018 seasons, completing 70 percent of his passes and throwing for 50 touchdowns. He's the best quarterback in this class, is a traditional dropback passer, and has the arm strength and accuracy to excel at the next level. There are concerns about his experience and mobility but neither will prevent him from being one of the first quarterbacks taken on draft day -- RW

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Brian Burns EDGE, FSU

Height: 6-5, Weight: 249

This is one of the guys when you look at him you see speed, speed and more speed. The Panthers had all kinds of problems rushing the passer last year and Julius Peppers retired, so this makes sense. Good pick for the Panthers. I really like this pick.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Concerns about his weight (he reportedly played at 235 during the 2018 season) were alleviated at the combine where he weighed 249. It didn't hurt that he ran a 4.53 40. Burns is an explosive edge rusher who is surprisingly strong. Regularly wins to the outside with his speed but showed the ability to run stunts inside as well. Needs to get better with hand usage and better develop his pass-rush moves but he reminds us on the field of Aldon Smith. -- RW

Dexter Lawrence DL, CLEM

Height: 6-4, Weight: 342

The Giants wanted to come away with one big guy, whether it be a defensive lineman or an offensive lineman and a quarterback in the first round. Gettleman is doing exactly what he wanted to do. He wanted to get a big, massive man on the line and he did just that.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Regularly requires double teams, pushes the pocket even if he's not a pure pass rusher. Disrupts passing game by getting hands up, deflecting passes and also has athleticism to drop into zone coverage. Is he a three-down player? That's what NFL teams will have to decide but there's no denying he's an immovable object in the middle of the defensive line who can use his sheer power to regularly be disruptive near the line of scrimmage. -- RW

Garrett Bradbury OL, NCST

I like this pick. It's a B-plus for me. The Vikings couldn't move anybody off the line of scrimmage last year. Bradbury is very athletic, not a very big kid, but he can move.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Bradbury is slender for the center spot and lacks in the power department, both in his hands and his anchor, but has insanely loose hips and flexible ankles which allow him to routinely win the leverage/angle battles on blocks most centers wouldn't come close to reaching. Tremendous combo blocker who's lightning quick finding linebackers at the second level. With more weight and strength, Bradbury can be an All-Pro interior blocker because of his athleticism and is the prototypical center you want in a zone-blocking scheme. -- CT

Jeffery Simmons DL, MISSST

Height: 6-4, Weight: 301

I love this pick. When you look at the tape, the guy who was dominating for Mississippi State was Simmons. He was dominating on the interior. This kid has a chance to be one of the most dominant interior linemen in two years. You could have made a case for getting a weapon for Mariota, but this pick makes a ton of sense. Love, love this pick.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Tore ACL before combine, which could drop him out of the first round even though he's a top-10 tlent. Simmons can't be moved off spot, is strong at point of attack, and has the ability to disengage from blocks to make tackles near the line of scrimmage. Very athletic, tenacious motor and is as effective against the run as teh pass. A disruptive backfield presence who is always near the ball. -- RW

Noah Fant TE, IOWA

Height: 6-4, Weight: 249

I like Noah Fant. I think it's a good pick for the Broncos, but I probably would have taken Drew Lock here. Joe Flacco is not the long-term answer at QB. Fant is a move tight end and they are becoming more valuable in the NFL, but I would have taken Lock.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Springy, fast, and elusive seam-stretching tight end with receiver-like pass-catching skills. Experience and flashes of consistency in-line as a blocker. The team that drafts him will be doing so mostly on his plus ability to boost the passing game. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Darnell Savage, Jr. S, MD

Height: 5-11, Weight: 198

The Green Bay Packers had all kinds of issues at safety last year. They signed Adrian Amos and he's a thumper and doesn't cover as much ground as Savage. This kid covers a lot of ground. The defense under Mike Pettine is going to be nasty this year.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Savage can play deep safety, nickel backer or line up in the slot. He explodes downhill and his speed allows him to disguise coverages until last moment. He is a good tackler but can sometimes be out of control when trying to make plays near the line of scrimmage. Can sometimes be fooled in coverage but has the athleticism and speed to make up for most mistakes, and he'll only get better with experience. -- RW

Andre Dillard OL, WASHST

Height: 6-5, Weight: 315

He's a good pass protector but he didn't have to put his hand in the ground. Eventually he'll have to, but can he? He better be a guy you can plug in there and be a 10-year starter and make some All-Pro teams. Taylor would have been my pick in this spot.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Elite athlete for the left tackle spot with a surprisingly power anchor and above-average awareness of stunts. Short, powerful punch, and his feet continue to move as he mirrors edge rushers. Not much run-blocking experience in college, but he has the refined talent to be a franchise left tackle in today's NFL. -- CT

Tytus Howard OL, ALST

Height: 6-5, Weight: 322

I thought there were better options on the board. Jawaan Taylor would have been my choice and Greg Little even. He could be a good move or could be a bust. They need him to be good right now. Deshaun Watson got killed last year. He's a massive man and they need help. Watson should be happy.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Howard has vice grips for hands, and if he's able to add weight at the NFL level without sacrificing his athleticism, he can be an awesome value find later in the draft. -- CT

Josh Jacobs RB, BAMA

Height: 5-10, Weight: 220

It kills me to say this, and I wanted to give this pick an 'A,' but you know how I feel about running backs going in the first round, but this kid is a great player. He's fresh and I think he will step in there and be a special player right away. He's great in blitz pickup as well.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Compactly built, one-cut-and-explodes type runner who excels at setting up blocks. Jacobs is difficult to bring down with initial contact he his speed affords him the ability to bounce plays outside -- though he doesn't force it. He runs hard, with purpose, is an efficient pass blocker, shows good hands as a receiver and can also return kicks. He's the best running back in this class and it's not close. -- RW

2018 College Stats

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Marquise Brown WR, OKLA

Height: 5-9, Weight: 166

I love this kid. I think he's an explosive player. Yes, he's small at 170 pounds, but this guy can fly. If you're gonna make Lamar Jackson a better quarterback, you need good players around him to make him better and this kid will help.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Blazing speed with the lateral quickness to match; Brown has the ability to put his foot in the ground and get in and out of cuts leaving defensive backs behind. Lacks strength as a blocker but is willing to do the job. Brown is great in the screen game, catches the ball cleanly, and is able to make defenders miss in small areas. A home-run hitter who suffered a Lisfranc injury that could sideline him till late summer. A first-round talent that may slip because of the injury. -- RW

2018 College Stats

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Montez Sweat EDGE, MISSST

Height: 6-6, Weight: 260

Yeah, there's issues. There were teams that took him off the board with concerns about the heart. The ability is there. The ability is phenomenal. He's fast, he made a lot of plays. Had a great senior year. Controversial pick to keep an eye on going forward after Redskins gave up picks to trade back into first round.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Looks like an NFL defensive end. Coming off a strong season at Mississippi State and only reconfirmed his ability to dominate at the Senior Bowl. Sweat uses his strength and hands to overpower offensive linemen and get into the backfield though he'll need to prove he's flexible enough to regularly win on the edge. -- RW

Johnathan Abram S, MISSST

Height: 5-11, Weight: 215

They need to get better on all levels of their defense. They decided that Abram was a better pick than the corners. This kid will thump you. The Raiders need to get back to that. I probably would have taken one of the corners, but I like the kid. I think this is a move in the right direction.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Tone-setter at the short and intermediate portions of the field thanks to tremendous play-recognition ability, burst, and closing speed. Eliminates yards after the catch on crossing routes and will beat most running backs to the corner. Not as productive in deep coverage yet not a liability there, all of which make him one of the most well-rounded defensive backs in the class. -- CT

Jerry Tillery DL, ND

Height: 6-6, Weight: 295

I love the selection. I think this kid has got great upside. The Chargers needed to get better on the defensive line and they needed to get tougher. They needed to get better inside, we saw that in the playoff loss to the Patriots.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Tillery has an explosive first step and his raw strength coupled with effective hand usage makes it incredibly difficult for offensive linemen to sustain blocks. He's a constant disruptive presence in the backfield on both run and pass plays and displays good awareness. Has unique size (6-foot-6) and is impossible to move off spot with the power to regularly collapse pocket. -- RW

L.J. Collier DL, TCU

He was one of the guys on my better than team (guys I like better than the scout do). He's a power end. Frank Clark was a power end. I like this pick.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Collier isn't a pure pass rusher but his strength allows him to set the edge in the run game, and he can hold the point of attack at the line of scrimmage. He's not a quick-twitch athlete but does the dirty work in the trenches and has a non-stop motor. Can carve out a niche in that role at the next level. Shows ability to scrape down LOS through trash to make plays. -- RW

Deandre Baker CB, UGA

Height: 5-11, Weight: 193

I like it. Here's the thing on Baker. Early in the process I had a GM tell me he was going to be the first cornerback taken and I didn't believe him. The kid comes with a swagger. He's a South Florida corner. South Florida corners come into the league with a swagger.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Has very little bad tape playing in the SEC against some of the best wide receivers in the country. The big issue is his size -- he's 5-foot-11, 185 pounds -- though he plays much bigger than that. Still, that could force him down draft board even though for us he's the third-best cornerback in this class. -- RW

Kaleb McGary OL, WASH

Height: 6-7, Weight: 317

I understand why they wanted to do it. They don't have a long-term answer at right tackle. Maybe he goes in and plays right tackle next year. The Falcons said they've gotta get better on the offensive line. I like this move paired with Lindstrom earlier.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Tall tackle who plays with a low, under-control style, is linearly explosive for his size, but lacks lateral mobility. Poppy combo-blocker who's very useful when asked to get to the second level but his feet stop moving at times when facing an outside speed rush. Starter potential but probably best as a swing tackle to start his career. -- CT

N'Keal Harry WR, ARIZST

Height: 6-2, Weight: 228

I watched every one of his games and believe me it pains me to give this a 'C+,' but I just think there were better options. One thing when you look at the Patriots is they don't play fast outside, they needed to get faster. Maybe they expect Josh Gordon to come back at some point, but, for me I would have taken Parris Campbell or one of those guys, a faster, more athletic receiver. I don't love this pick.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Physically imposing jump-ball receiver with deceptive speed and explosiveness who lacks in the aglity department but starred at Arizona State since his true freshman season in 2016. Good, not great with the ball in his hands, Harry is a load to bring to the turf and can, in some instances, make defenders miss in space. Low-end WR1 who could flourish as a big slot at the next level. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Byron Murphy CB, WASH

Height: 5-11, Weight: 190

I like this move. I think this kid is a feisty kid. He'll stick his head in there and he will tackle. There are some corners in this draft that don't tackle (see Greedy Williams), but this kid is tough. The Cardinals rebounded from a tough first night.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Impressive change of direction and mirroring techniques and shows good anticipation on route progressions. Also effective when coming off one route to attack another. Needs to do a better job of disengaging from WR blocks on running plays but an athletic cornerback plays much bigger than his 5-foot-11 frame. Still, could fall out to Day 2 because of size and 4.55 40 time. -- RW

Rock Ya-Sin CB, TEMPLE

Height: 6-0, Weight: 192

The Colts got a great season from Pierre Desir last year, they need help on the other side. I think this pick makes all the sense in the world for the Indianapolis Colts. Good pick and they've got a lot of picks and will be very active today.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Ya-Sin played one year for Temple after transferring from Presbyterian College and he quickly became one of the nation's best cornerbacks. Physical and fast, Ya-Sin excels in man coverage, has fantastic ball skills, and is solid in run support. His footwork can be sloppy at times but his athleticism often made up for it in college. -- RW

Jawaan Taylor OL, FLA

Height: 6-5, Weight: 312

The Jaguars have knocked it out of the park (with Josh Allen in first round and now Taylor). This kid is nasty. Talk about big, physical guys. Put him at right tackle and now all of a sudden your offensive line is solidified. I love this pick. Jaguars nailed it.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Immensely powerful tackle with above-average mobility in any direction and while not super explosive, he can get to the second level relatively quickly on outside runs and destroy linebackers. At times his lateral quickness is pushed to the limit by speedy edge rushers, but he has heavy hands he deploys with mostly good timing and decent accuracy. Franchise right tackle. -- CT

Deebo Samuel WR, SC

I think there were better options here. I think Parris Campbell or even DK Metcalf would have been a better option. This kid just does not run that well and I'm concerned, he's only 5-11.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Can be the most dynamic player on the field, Samuel can line up in the backfield, run the jet sweep, line up in the slot or outside and beat a cornerback on a go route. He can also return kicks. A precise route-runner who is a bigger, stronger version of what Brandin Cooks can do. Incredibly tough, he willingly takes on blockers and welcomes contact. Proved speed wasn't an issue at the Senior Bowl and with a 4.50 40 at the combine. -- RW

2018 College Stats

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Greg Little OL, MISS

Height: 6-5, Weight: 310

I love this kid. This is an A+ in my book. This kid is a first-round talent. There was talk before the season that he was Top-10. He didn't quite play to that, but you get him under the right coaching and I think he has all the skills to be an All-Pro.

A+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Fits into the category of "rare" specimen at the left tackle spot with smooth movements in every direction, and he's well-versed in pass protection. Little needs more lower-half weight/strength to help his anchor, and in some instances -- though not often -- he can be a waist-bender. Knows how to use his long arms by striking first, and his run blocking his behind his pass protection, but with more power, he can be a franchise left tackle. -- CT

Cody Ford OL, OKLA

Height: 6-4, Weight: 329

When I talked to (Bills head coach) Sean McDermott at the combine, one of the things he said is we have to get better around Josh Allen, well, they did. This kid gets them really that much better. This is a heck of a tackle. Nice move by the Buffalo Bills.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Power blocker who creates serious torque with faster-than-you'd-expect leg churn and has great feet for his size which allow him to mirror well. He's long enough to deal with small speed-rushers but they give him more problems than power rushers. May not have the explosiveness in his kick slide to play on the edge, yet still a fun, punishing offensive line prospect. -- CT

Sean Bunting CB, CMICH

The Bucs had corner issues all last year. Vernon Hargreaves never has come close to playing up to how they thought he could play. They have to get better on the corner. It's a pick of need.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Fluid-hipped outside corner in a nickel corner's body. Feisty playing the ball in the air and aggressive albeit not super effective in press man Had a great combine but doesn't play to his timed speed. -- CT

Trayvon Mullen CB, CLEM

Height: 6-1, Weight: 199

I think there were better options here. I think Greedy Williams, even though he's a pile jumper because he doesn't tackle anybody. You've still got to get that cover guy. He covers, he just doesn't tackle. Don't like what the Raiders are doing.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Boom-or-bust cornerback who can click-and-close with the best of them when he wants but has lethargic snaps every game and isn't very interested in helping in run support. If his full potential can be tapped into, Mullen can be a versatile perimeter corner with plus man-to-man ability, yet the twitchiness of his movements and overall play are inconsistent right now. -- CT

Dalton Risner OL, KSTATE

I don't love the kid. The Big 12, I think I could play left tackle there and not give up any sacks. There's not a lot of pass rushers in the Big 12, so you've got to slow the roll there.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Chippy, versatile blocker with impressive feet, a heavy anchor, and the ability to recover if initially beaten, although the latter doesn't happen very often at all. Despite a lack of prototypical size, Risner projects to the right tackle spot but has the mobility to play anywhere up front. -- CT

Drew Lock QB, MIZZOU

Height: 6-4, Weight: 228

I love the kid. He's got the swagger, a big arm. Everything I love in a quarterback. I think he's gonna command the huddle. He's got a big arm, he's a gunslinger. A lot of people compare him to Jay Cutler, but you know what there's a little Brett Favre in there too.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Good-sized, decently athletic, big-armed pocket passer who can throw from many platforms and bases with good, not great accuracy and lives for the deep ball. Occasional bad miss on easy throws when he trusts his arm too much and delivers while off balance. Flashed the ability to read the entire field and typically showcased good pocket patience. -- CT

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PYDS

PCT

TDS

INT

Jahlani Tavai LB, HAWAII

Height: 6-2, Weight: 250

I love him. He flies around to the football. Nowadays you've gotta have a guy that can fly around and run.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Big, imposing off-ball linebacker with above-average twitch for someone his size. Played and has ability on the edge with an impressive outside speed rush an a small assortment of pass-rushing moves. Sideline to sideline range good, not great. Same goes for his block-shedding skills. Old-school linebacker with some new-school traits. -- CT

Elgton Jenkins OL, MISSST

Height: 6-4, Weight: 310

This is one of the guys that was on my better than list. People say McCoy and Bradbury, but he was right there with them. He's an athletic kid, he can get up the field and he's a nasty kid at times. He's gonna be a good player for the Packers.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Blue collar power center with the best anchor among interior linemen in this class. Adequate lateral mobility, but Jenkins would be best in a power-running scheme. His pass-protection skills are as NFL-ready as it gets at the center spot.

Joejuan Williams CB, VANDY

Height: 6-4, Weight: 211

He was the captain of my better than team, that tells you what I think about him. I love this kid. The New England Patriots get it. Bill Belichick works the system better than anybody. Belichick the master at work again.

A+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Comfortable in both press man and off-coverage, has speed to run with receivers on deep routes and the quickness to blanket underneath coverage. Ran a 4.64 40 at the combine but reportedly improved to the 4.55 range at his pro day. Whatever the number, the reality is that Williams is exactly what NFL teams look for in a big, physical playmaking corner. His game speed exceeds whatever he may run on the track and he's a likely Day 2 selection. -- RW

Greedy Williams CB, LSU

Height: 6-2, Weight: 185

I do like his cover skills, don't get me wrong. Let's face it when you can rush the passer with Olivier Vernon on one side and you got the other guy Garrett on the other side, you are gonna be able to attack and play press man. I just don't like his ability to tackle.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Silky smooth in coverage and has full confidence in his abilities and athleticism. Can blanket receivers when he's locked but other times looks to lack focus. NFL source: 'He won't tackle anybody,' which could turn off some teams picking high in the draft. -- RW

Marquise Blair S, UTAH

Height: 6-1, Weight: 195

What does Seattle want? They want another Earl Thomas, a guy they can pluck in the middle of the field and go sideline to sideline. Now this kid, I'm not saying he's Earl Thomas, but that's the kind of player they want. I think there were better options.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Deep safety who explodes downhill on running plays and can be a disruptive force near the line of scrimmage. Is undersized by safety standards, so there are concerns about durability, but is a game-changer from centerfield. Sometimes he can be over-aggressiveness, resulting in missed tackles or bad angles in pass coverage.

Erik McCoy OL, TXAM

This was a smart pick because they had to replace Max Unger. Drew Brees has to be protected inside since he is a short quarterback, so it works.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Compact, mobile interior blocker with good accuracy with his punch. When he can brace for a blitzer, he has sturdy anchor but is susceptible to counter moves from high-caliber defensive linemen because his feet stop moving on occasion. With more weight and power, McCoy can be a quality starter at center. -- CT

Ben Banogu EDGE, TCU

Height: 6-3, Weight: 250

This guy is a DPR (designated pass rusher). He's gonna play on third down. The Colts need to get better on third down. I like this pick. I don't love it, but here's the deal in that division now you better be able to rush the passer.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Banogu did everything for TCU. Some teams could see him as an off-ball linebacker who blitzes in some instances. There's not a lot of pass-rushing polish or bend to his game. He's awesome on stunts and sets a strong edge. -- CT

Irv Smith Jr. TE, BAMA

Height: 6-2, Weight: 242

I like this pick. Look, here's the deal, he can block. There aren't a lot of tight ends that can block and catch. This guy is a complete tight end. Irv Smith will block, so I think that makes him an impact player right away.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Impressive yards-after-the-catch tight end with H-back size. Flashes of strength as a blocker but best split out in the slot for a mismatch advantage against nickel corners or linebackers. Decent athlete for the position with reliable hands. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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A.J. Brown WR, MISS

Height: 6-0, Weight: 226

He's a better receiver than DK Metcalf. I like this kid, I think this is a good pick. The Titans have to do everything in their power to make Marcus Mariota better, he has to get better, so why not give him another weapon, allow him to throw the football, be better throwing the football, be more productive.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Worked primarily from slot until D.K. Metcalf was lost to injury. Brown ran a lot of in-breaking and comeback routes in simplified Ole Miss passing offense. Good at finding soft spots in zone coverage and a strong after-the-catch runner. Efficient out of breaks, a long strider who takes a while to get up to top speed, Brown sometimes struggles with press-man coverage, especially against bigger cornerbacks. -- RW

2018 College Stats

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Drew Sample TE, WASH

Height: 6-5, Weight: 255

This is a strange pick for me. It's hard to kill them for this pick because he wasn't used at Washington, I think once he gets to the NFL game he might be a better player than he showed at Washington because the skill set is there.

C

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Shows ability to drive legs and lock up when blocking on the edge in the run game. A good blocker who can line up inline our out wide. He's a very fluid, smooth route runner who ran primarily underneath routes. That said, almost one-third of his receptions last season were for more than 20 yards and he didn't drop a pass, according to Pro Football Focus. -- RW

2018 College Stats

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Miles Sanders RB, PSU

Height: 5-11, Weight: 211

I give this an A grade, you know why? You draft a running back in the second round and it's okay, you can get away with that. Not in the first round, second round is fine. One-year wonder, right? He only played one year behind Saquon Barkley. That's okay when you are a running back, there's no wear and tear.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Sanders, who played behind Saquon Barkley in 2017, is a physical, compactly built one-cut runner who is an asset in the pass game. He can run patterns out of the backfield as well as line up in the slot, and when targeted he shows soft hands and the ability to make defenders miss in open space. Sanders is a shifty runner through the hole who uses eyes and quickness to set up blocks, then sets up second-level defenders with feints; he's hard to tackle in the open field because of strength, low center of gravity and effective use of the stiff-arm. -- RW

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Lonnie Johnson CB, UK

They had issues last year really big-time in coverage. Big, long, instinctive corner, played in the SEC. Surprised he lasted this long.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Johnson has the long frame that NFL teams covet. He needs to do a better job getting off wide receiver blocks to make plays, and do a better job of tackling when he does get off those blocks. He's tough to beat deep because of his size and speed but he needs to be more consistently physical both in coverage and against the run. -- RW

Max Scharping OL, NILL

Their offensive line was a disaster last year, Deshaun Watson was sacked 62 times. He can move, you have to get better up there. Good pick.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Scharping needs to be more consistent when firing his hands and has too wide of a kick slide but he somehow got it done for multiple years at Northern Illinois. Teams should be intrigued by his size, length, and impressive athleticism. -- CT

Mecole Hardman WR, UGA

Height: 5-10, Weight: 187

This is definitely a pick where you say if something happens with Tyreek Hill it's a 'B-.' I think this is a reactionary pick. I think there were better options. Parris Campbell or Riley Ridley would have been better choices.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Hardman is a linear rocket with moments that showcase good hands. There's kick/punt return value with him as well. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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JJ Arcega-Whiteside WR, STNFRD

Height: 6-2, Weight: 225

I think there were better options on the field. He didn't play to that speed. When you watched him on tape you say he's a big, physical guy but he doesn't run that well, well he did run that well. I worry when guys don't play to their speed.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Looks like Mike Evans but could be more Anquan Boldin based on how fast he runs (Arecega-Whitside didn't run the 40 at the combine). Regularly more physical than smaller receivers and his basketball background (both his parents played professionally) shows up on tape when he posts up defensive backs for jump balls in the end zone. He's a high-point catcher on downfield throws and is rarely out of position to make play on ball. Questions will be about deep speed and separation separate downfield. -- RW

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Trysten Hill DL, UCF

There were some issues off the field that led to him sitting out some games, spending time on the bench. When you pop on the tape the kid is a force. I love this pick.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Hill is a young battler who taps into every ounce of his ability on every snap. Plus burst off the ball. Some pass-rushing moves, and the speed, athleticism, and wherewithal to chase down runners from the backside. -- CT

Parris Campbell WR, OHIOST

Height: 6-0, Weight: 205

GM Chris Ballard is knocking it out of the park. He is one of my favorite receivers. One of my No. 1 guys in this draft as it relates to outside guys. He can flat out fly. He was misused at Ohio State.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Campbell plays mostly out of the slot. He runs underneath routes using athleticism and speed to create separation and once ball is in his hands he is electric. Rarely runs deep routes but has speed to routinely beat anyone off the line of scrimmage. Blazed a 4.31 40 at the combine and will be a Day 2 pick, assuming he doesn't sneak into Round 1. -- RW

2018 College Stats

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Nasir Adderley S, DE

Height: 6-0, Weight: 206

They are gonna pair him with Derwin James. They still have Adrian Phillips, but you know how Gus Bradley plays his safeties, they play a lot of three safety looks. I think this is a pick for the future. The Chargers are having a heck of a draft.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Adderley is an FCS player who fit right in against FBS talent at the Senior Bowl. He covers a lot of ground in secondary, especially when running downhill. He needs to improve route recognition but is able to make up for it with impressive athleticism. A good open-field tackler who, as a converted cornerback, is also good in coverage. Undersized by traditional safety standards but fits perfectly in today's NFL secondary. -- RW

Taylor Rapp S, WASH

Height: 6-0, Weight: 208

He's a playmaker but his 40 time is a concern. He plays a lot faster than that, which shows up on tape.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Super-springy, play-making safety with awesome instincts packed into a smaller-ish frame. Speed and twitch are high-level, as is his tackling reliability. Lack of size could hurt him at the next level, yet he projects to a hybrid Tyrann Mathieu/Budda Baker role at the next level and should start instantly. -- CT

Andy Isabella WR, MA

Height: 5-9, Weight: 188

The Cardinals need to get playmakers and this is a guy that's a playmaker. He can fly. I love Andy Isabella. He has a chance to be special. I don't like what they've done in the draft, but this one actually makes sense.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Can line up anywhere on the field, a former high school sprint champion, Isabella is a legit deep threat despite his size (5-foot-8). He ran a 4.31 40 at the combine and that translates to his game speed too. He led the nation in receiving yards per game in 2018 and had more than 200 receiving yards against Georgia. Don't be surprised if Isabella finds his way into the second round. -- RW

2018 College Stats

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Juan Thornhill S, UVA

Height: 6-0, Weight: 205

I like safeties who have been corners at one time in their careers, and Thornhill played that spot at times for the Cavaliers. That gives him range in the middle of the field. He can also play some slot corner if needed.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

A former cornerback, Thornhill has insane athleticism (4.4 40, 44-inch vertical). He can cover from the slot, has the speed to run with wide receivers. Also has the strength and size to win downfield jump balls against bigger players. Thornhill needs to do better job getting off blocks but has all the tools to be a solid NFL player and make an immediate impact. -- RW

D.K. Metcalf WR, MISS

Height: 6-3, Weight: 228

He looks like Julio Jones, but he doesn't play like Julio Jones. Where is the productivity for a guy with that kind of physical traits. He can run, he's big, he's strong, he's powerful and he doesn't put up a lot of numbers. Why? Because he has no wiggle.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Eats up cushion against cornerbacks and despite poor shuttle and 3-cone drills at the combine, routinely shows the ability to put the foot in the ground and get and out of breaks. He's good at creating separation with shoulder fakes and blazing speed (4.33 40). Also displays soft hands when hauling in long arcing throws, can high-point the ball on fade routes and has strong hands to fight off physical cornerbacks for the ball. -- RW

2018 College Stats

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Zach Allen DL, BC

Height: 6-4, Weight: 281

You put on the tape of this kid, every single play he plays hard, plays tough, plays physical. He plays the run hard. Might not ever go to a Pro Bowl, but you stick him in there and he's going to play for seven, eight or nine years.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Hybrid defensive end / defensive tackle with serious weight, power, and above-average ability to use his hands to defeat blockers. Flashes moments of awesome bend for his size but is mostly a power player up front. His versatility, edge-setting skills, and occasional pass rush impact are his greatest strengths. -- CT

Diontae Johnson WR, TOLEDO

I think it's a little high for him, but who am I to argue with the Steelers when it comes to drafting wide receivers? They know what they're doing. They'll be fine.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Johnson has serious speed and is a twitchy athlete who can sink his hips and change directions in a hurry. Small frame, though, lacking power and the ability to beat press coverage consistently. He reminds me of Paul Richardson. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Jalen Hurd WR, BAYLOR

Height: 6-5, Weight: 226

Hurd is raw but he has talent. He made the position move from running back to receiver at Baylor, so he's still growing as a player. This was a little high for him, especially after taking another receiver in Round 2.

C-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Hurd is the ultimate project, a former Tennessee running back turned Baylor receiver with serious athleticism and major size. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Jachai Polite EDGE, FLA

Height: 6-3, Weight: 258

When you watch the tape, the kid plays hard all the time and he can rush the passer. It's more than just the bad combine that caused his fall, he didn't get a good recommendation from the staff in Florida. He also, after the combine, went to his pro day and gained weight. There's a bad track record of pass rushers from Florida.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Incredible first step around the edge, possesses elite change-of-direction ability, and a high motor. Can sometimes get engulfed by offensive linemen but has the quickness to break free. Will have to prove that he isn't undersized and can regularly win against bigger players. -- RW

Josh Oliver TE, SJST

There are more options where I would've gone here, but they really liked him. The Jags have improved dramatically in this draft. Dare I say it, this might be the best team in the division again.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Has a long way to go as a blocker, both inline and when pulling/wham blocks. Lines up inline, as H-back and in slot, where he was used like a "big" slot receiver. Has off the charts athleticism but is raw and will need time to develop. Doesn't always get in and out of breaks crisply but shows big-play ability. Has a long way to go as a blocker. -- RW

2018 College Stats

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Darrell Henderson RB, MEMP

Height: 5-8, Weight: 208

I love the Henderson pick. That kid's explosive, he can fly. Here's the thing about the Rams. What is this telling us about Todd Gurley? He didn't play in the championship game ... there's some concern about his knee injury.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Supremely fast back who can hit home runs from anywhere on the field. Occasionally can make defenders miss in space but his cutting skills are more subtle than violent. Speed allows him to bounce off weak tackle attempts. - CT

2018 College Stats

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Dre'Mont Jones DL, OHIOST

Height: 6-3, Weight: 281

Love this pick for the Broncos. They needed to get stronger inside, and he does that. Was productive for the Buckeyes pushing the pocket, so you're getting pressure from the interior of the defensive line here. Great pick.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Low center of gravity, shows unique quickness for his size. Change of direction is uncanny, especially when closing down quarterback in backfield. Good motor, pursues plays downfield but sometimes struggles to disengage from blocks. Occasionally shows ability to win with hands but doesn't win enough. -- RW

Germaine Pratt LB, NCST

Height: 6-2, Weight: 240

Pratt is a physical linebacker who can run. Linebacker was a big position of need for the Bengals, especially after getting sniped on Devin Bush when the Steelers moved up to No. 10. But I think this is a bit high for Pratt.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Safety convert to linebacker with plus athleticism which leads to him moving around the field quickly thanks to defensive-back like plant-and-drive skills. Tiny flashes of a swim and swipe to beat blockers when scraping laterally but too often he stands still and lets offensive linemen get into his frame. Dynamic closing speed, making him a useful run-and-chase linebacker you went to keep clean. -- CT

David Montgomery RB, IOWAST

Height: 5-10, Weight: 222

I don't love it, I think he's a plodder more than anything else. I liked the Henderson pick a few spots earlier a lot more.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Low center of gravity runner with scary lateral jump-cut skills and the best contact balance of any back in the class. Reliable receiver who instantly morphs into a runner after catching the football and surprises defenders with his quickness after the catch. Best between the tackles carving through the defensive line and second level. -- CT

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Devin Singletary RB, FAU

I know LeSean McCoy is getting older and they're gonna throw the football to Singletary. Sean McDermott is getting players to make Josh Allen better. The Bills are moving in the right direction.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Light-footed, hard-nosed runner with impressive burst, lateral agility, and vision. Plus balance when absorbing contact or when he has to make a variety of cuts to get through a running lane. At times he's electric in space and will hit home runs down the field those his timed speed left much to be desired. -- CT

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Jace Sternberger TE, TXAM

Having one year of productivity doesn't concern me, because once he gets with Aaron Rodgers he's going to catch a ton of passes. I like the pick.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Ran a 4.75 40 at the combine but looks fast on tape. Is an effortless, crisp route runner, who snatches ball out of air in tight areas and excels at yards after the catch. Needs to get stronger as a blocker -- he's willing but needs work. Only has one year of production but is a reliable middle-of-the-field security blanket who regularly wins one-on-one matchups. . -- RW

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Terry McLaurin WR, OHIOST

He is raw, but he can run. He had an impressive senior bowl that elevated him in scouts' eyes. He fills a major need and he knows Dwayne Haskins well.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Special teams ace who demonstrated plenty of route-running polish, twitchiness, and impressive speed as a receiver at the Senior Bowl. Older prospect but someone who could be more productive in the NFL than he was in college. - CT

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Chase Winovich EDGE, MICH

Winovich is a try hard player who fits the New England style. His versatility will be big in their defense as they look to replace the production of Trey Flowers on the defensive line.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Decently bendy edge rusher who plays with his hair on fire and enters the league with a nice arsenal of initial pass-rushing moves. While his pass-rushing moves are decently effective, he's not heavy handed and doesn't convert speed to much power. Potential to be a three-down defensive end in the future and should be a solid contributor early. -- CT

Michael Deiter OL, WISC

Height: 6-5, Weight: 309

This is a great pick. He is a mauler who comes from a program that plays in pro style offense. Can play guard or tackle.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Experienced interior blocker further ahead paving running lanes than protecting the passer. Easily overwhelmed against power but has solid lateral mobility to execute blocks in space at the second level. - CT

Sione Takitaki LB, BYU

Takitaki's a linebacker who can run and do a lot of things. He ran 4.62 and the effort is always there. Might have been a little high for him at this spot though.

C

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Takitaki attacks the line of scrimmage under control but with purpose in the run game and has athleticism to drop into coverage. Sometimes struggles to disengage from blocks is a physical, athletic inside linebacker who can also rush off the edge. -- RW

Will Harris S, BC

Height: 6-1, Weight: 207

He is an athletic safety who can bring a nice pop when he tackles. The Lions needed to get more athletic on the back end.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Active, run-support specialist safety who's best when he can flow toward the line of scrimmage after the snap. Hips are a little stiff but his range is above-average, and because he's decently explosive, he can close on the ball in a hurry. Good No. 3 safety with starting upside. -- CT

Justin Layne CB, MICHST

Height: 6-2, Weight: 192

He has first round talent and he fills a major need for the Steelers.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Layne is a converted wide receiver who, at 6-foot-3, has great ball skills. He's very physical within rules in press-man, and can regularly affect the timing of a route. He looks more comfortable in off-coverage than press, where he can struggle to flip his hips when smaller, shiftier receivers break off their routes. He's consistently in position to make the tackle but doesn't always wrap up. -- RW

Khalen Saunders DL, WIL

He is a power player who will fit nicely in their defense. They have to get better against the run and he will play inside with their move to the 4-3.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

I'm pretty sure Saunders was created in a lab. He does things 99.999 percent of 320-pound humans cannot do. He knows how to use his hands and definitely utilizes his extreme athleticism to his advantage. He does have a tendency to stand up and get complacent in his rushes from time to time. -- CT

Jaylon Ferguson EDGE, LATECH

Height: 6-5, Weight: 259

Ferguson had some scouts talking him up as a first-round pick. That tells you about his talent. He is raw but the Ravens know pass rushers, and he brings plenty of production from the collegiate level.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Epically productive edge rusher with the looks of a starting NFL defensive end. Most of his sacks came via effort or other elements outside of his control. Pass-rush plans are essentially non-existent, and he's not nearly as bendy around the corner as you'd expect. -- CT

Kahale Warring TE, SDGST

I love this kid. He created a lot of buzz through the process, and he should have some untapped potential. I just don't know how big a need tight end was, which keeps it from being an A.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Warring, the top sleeper tight end in this class, is slightly above average in terms of build, is surprisingly spry breaking off his route stem, and uses his large frame to wall off defenders down the field with the ball in the air. A lot of those elements are Kyle Rudolph-like. Warring too has loads of experience in-line as a blocker and holds in own in that area. While not a true road-grader on the outside, he'll win some battles in the trenches early in his pro career. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Damien Harris RB, BAMA

Height: 5-10, Weight: 216

The Patriots picked up an SEC running back in the first round last year, and here they get a nice player who can mix in behind Sony Michel. They had bigger needs, but with all their picks, might as well take him here if you like him.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Runs with a lot more power than his listed weight would suggest and has loose, relatively fluid hips, a combination that leads to defenders bouncing off him. Good, not great speed and cutting ability in space, and occasionally can make a defender miss. He's more of contact balance/power back and a rock in pass protection. -- CT

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Cody Barton LB, UTAH

Height: 6-2, Weight: 237

He is an active player who can run and cover. Some of the scouts I talked to thought he could go in Round 2.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

High-cut, quicker than fast linebacker with above-average smoothness to his on-field movements, which especially translate well in coverage. Flashes of good block-shedding but it's not a strength of his game. Could play with more power too. Lacks range but fluidity should allow him to make a roster as a backup linebacker. -- CT

Connor McGovern OL, PSU

This is a good solid pick. He is a player who will be a quality starter in a few years. He opened a lot of holes for good runners at Penn State.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Reliable, unspectacular guard with sound fundamentals, great balance, and good linear athleticism. Aware of stunts and delayed blitzes but can take an extra second to get to them. Not a people mover nor a space player but has a strong grip and an impressive back bend when anchoring. -- CT

Trey Pipkins OL, Sioux Falls

Height: 6-6, Weight: 309

There's a lot of athleticism there. A lot of potential to grow. They can take their time and develop him.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Developmental tackle with NFL height, length, and excellent athletic traits. Needs to work on the efficiency of his kick slide and hand placement. Likely will take time for him to acclimate to dealing with edge rushers who can match him physically. Starting upside a few years down the road. -- CT

Chuma Edoga OL, USC

Height: 6-3, Weight: 308

He is an athletic tackle who needs to get bigger and tougher. He is good in pass protection but he isn't great in the run game.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Edoga is a unique prospect at under 6-4 but with arms nearly 35-inches long. He needs to get stronger and add weight. No question about that. His supreme physical gifts could get him onto the field early in his career. Edoga glides in pass protection, and uses his length to his advantage often. He's a smooth mover when getting to the second level as a run blocker too. -- CT

Miles Boykin WR, ND

I love this kid's ability. He has a chance to be a big-time producer if the offense can use him correctly. Lamar Jackson will love him, even after getting Marquise Brown in Round 1.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Boykin is an interesting sleeper because he didn't have eye-popping production at Notre Dame yet has a complete skill set with impressive hands, decent athleticism, and surprising downfield speed. A strong showing at the combine likely caused him to fly up boards at over 6-2 and heavier than 215 pounds. -- CT

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Jamel Dean CB, AUBURN

Dean is a kid who was a good corner in a good conference playing in the SEC. Late in the process, scouts started talking him up as a cover player, and the Bucs need those.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Dean looks like a safety or even a linebacker on the field. His length, physicality, and linear explosiveness could allow him to blossom in the correct scheme. He very well could get exposed by quickness from nimble pro receivers. -- CT

Oshane Ximines EDGE, ODU

Height: 6-3, Weight: 253

He is a long-armed pass rusher who is raw and has the ability to to become a situational pass rusher in his first year. The Giants have a big pass-rush need that they didn't fill in the first round, but Ximines will help.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Polished small-school prospect with long arms, good burst off the snap, and a dazzling array of pass-rushing moves. While it may take time for him to acclimate to the speed and power of the NFL, Ximines as the tool box to thrive as a situational edge rusher right away. -- CT

Dawson Knox TE, MISS

Knox can run, and he helps fill a need in Buffalo as they retool the position. It's another weapon for Josh Allen. Knox was underutilized at Ole Miss, so he could be better in the pros.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Knox can line up inline, as an h-back or in the slot. He will finish blocks and is an asset in the run game/screen game because of it. He's smooth in his routes and shows good deep speed. He also shows good hands but it's hard to project how good he'll be at next level because he had so few targets -- had just 15 catches in 2018 and didn't score during his college career. -- RW

Will Grier QB, WVU

He is being taken as a backup, but are we sure he's better than Kyle Allen? This one doesn't make a lot of sense to me, as you can get contributors even late in the third round.

C

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Very good understanding of pre-snap defense and gets the ball out quickly on shorter routes. If Ryan Finley is an anticipation thrower, Grier is a timing thrower on deeper routes. He shows good touch on sideline routes though he sometimes tries to make plays when throwing the ball away is the smart move. Downfield arm-strength accuracy is a concern, as is his decision making, which can lead to unforced errors. -- RW

GP

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PCT

TDS

INT

Yodny Cajuste OL, WVU

The Patriots get some good value here, as Cajuste could have went 30 picks earlier and no one would complain. He needs some developing, but the Pats have the luxury of doing that. Solid find.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Ideally sized, noticeably strong left tackle with awesome ability with his hands, often resetting or knocking down pass rusher's hands. Mean streak is there too. With quicker feet, Cajuste can be a legitimate star at left tackle. -- CT

Alexander Mattison RB, BOISE

Mattison was productive for the Broncos, but he ran 4.57 in the 40-yard dash, so he's isn't anything more than a pounder. I think some better RBs were probably on the board here.

C

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Royce Freeman was a record-setting bell cow at Oregon, a low center of gravity slasher who didn't run by many down the field at the end of his illustrious collegiate career but was a nightmare to tackle. I get a similar feel with Mattison, a powerful throwback type with good lean, burst, and strength to fall forward without much juice to break off huge gains. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Hakeem Butler WR, IOWAST

Height: 6-5, Weight: 227

The Cardinals got a huge, fast, contested-catch extraordinaire in Hakeem Butler in the start of the fourth round. Outstanding value. Butler can play inside or outside and dominate with his size and big catch radius.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Despite his size (6-foot-5), Butler shows good separation on comeback routes and the ability to put foot in ground and change direction like someone six inches shorter. A willing blocker, he engages smaller DBs and doesn't let go. Butler has great body control, and is able to adjust to underthrown balls and make touch catches. He can run inside, seam-busting routes from the slot and is a huge middle-of-the-field target who can make contested catches. Only issue is the occasional drop but Butler is a first-round talent. -- RW

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Ryan Finley QB, NCST

Arm-strength concerns likely were the reason Finley sank to the fourth round, but he's a rhythm pocket passer who can throw with anticipation. Accuracy is good. Nice depth at QB for Cincinnati.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Finley is the best anticipation thrower in this class and has a great feel for identifying options based on defense. He processes information quickly, which he needs to do because of lack of elite arm strength. He has good composure in the pocket, and is a rhythm thrower who can get hot. If you play zone he'll pick you apart. But what happens when first read isn't there? That might be bigger question than arm strength. -- RW

2018 College Stats

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Chauncey Gardner-Johnson S, FLA

Height: 5-11, Weight: 210

The Saints add to a talented young secondary with Gardner-Johnson, a safety/corner hybrid who's as comfortable manning the slot as he is ranging from center field. Some tackling concerns, but awesome value.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Can play in the slot, near the line of scrimmage, and effectively blitz off the slot. He also has the strength to take on blockers and affect the play behind it. Explodes downhill to make plays and sShows good coverage ability on shorter routes in front of him. His athleticism and versatility will make him attractive to NFL teams and Gardner-Johnson could end up being a Day 1 selection. -- RW

Maxx Crosby EDGE, EMICH

Height: 6-5, Weight: 255

Crosby is an elite athlete for the edge rusher spot and was a dominant player in the MAC for multiple seasons. He uses his hands very well to beat tackles but must get a lot stronger to be productive in the NFL.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Crosby is a long, angular, and at times, explosive edge rusher in need of much more power. Decent hand work too. -- CT

Anthony Nelson DL, IOWA

Nelson is a large, long, refined pass-rusher who crushed his combine and consistently won on the edge. With a little more strength, he can be a reliable, three-down end in Tampa for a long time.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Nelson is a plus athlete who honed his pass-rushing moves in college and efficiently deploys his hands often. While he needs more strength to hold down a full-time gig on the edge, Nelson is a tall, long, advanced pass-rusher ready to outperform his draft status. -- CT

Julian Love CB, ND

Love was an insanely productive cornerback for the Fighting Irish, and while he doesn't have great top-end speed, he's a fluid mover, good in man and zone, and very aware when the ball is arriving.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Elite combination of athleticism, awareness, and ball skills which led to huge production numbers while at Notre Dame. Decent versatility but probably best in a zone scheme that allows him to read and react to what's in front of him. Lacking slightly in the size and length department but should instantly translates to a multi-faceted role at the next level. -- CT

Khari Willis S, MICHST

Height: 5-11, Weight: 213

Willis was a late-riser who takes an extra second to recognize route combinations yet gets his hands on the football often. He's rangy as a tackler but a below-average athlete for the position with good strength.

D-

Kendall Sheffield CB, OHIOST

Sheffield has 'Ohio State speed,' but he's a small corner who's not very natural mirroring receivers down the field. Too early for him, even if he fills a need in Atlanta.

C-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Sheffield transferred to Ohio State from Alabama yet failed to meet expectations. He has a reputation as a super-fast player but was beaten deep somewhat often in 2018, and his overall game is very inconsistent. Sheffield can even be a tick late reacting to the football at times. In other occasions, he gets there in a flash. -- CT

Bryce Love RB, STNFRD

Height: 5-9, Weight: 200

If healthy, Love has deceptive, blazing speed down the field and showcased awesome vision and twitch between the tackles. After heavy-usage at Stanford and a torn ACL, can he regain all of his athleticism?

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Love's production fell off a cliff in 2018 after a 2,000-yard season in 2017, but Stanford's blocking had much more to do with that than Love's ability. He's tiny but possesses dynamic feet, the ability to erupt through a hole when he finds it and the top-level long speed to score from anywhere on the field. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Justice Hill RB, OKLAST

Height: 5-10, Weight: 198

Hill is as dangerous in space as they come at the RB position and is freakishly fluid in his hips. Vision and a tendency to bounce outside are the only concerns with his game. The Ravens are committed to the run game.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

At 5-foot-9, 200 pounds, Hill is stronger than he looks, and displays quick burst and acceleration. His breakaway game speed is confirmed by his 4.4 40-yard time at the combine. Rarely taken down by the first defender, he's great in small areas. Needs to be a better blocker and and isn't a short yardage back. Can he run consistently between the tackles? -- RW

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Dru Samia OL, OKLA

Samia is an experienced battler at guard who knows how to use his hands to his advantage and plays with a mean streak. His lateral mobility will be stretched to the max. Vikes keep adding to O-line.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

The first words in my notes on Samia are "gritty battler." He typically initiates contact and is under control. He really gets after it in the run game, but his movements can be clunky and his pad level isn't as necessarily low. Samia's hand work is slightly inconsistent too. -- CT

Christian Miller EDGE, BAMA

Height: 6-3, Weight: 247

Miller wasn't on high snap count player for Alabama yet made the most his opportunities, and was clearly the team's most impressive outside pass rusher in 2018. He's an explosive athlete that gives the Panthers another versatile edge talent.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Miller was a rotational player on Alabama's loaded defense. I respect how he made the most of his appearances. He has long arms and a thinner lower half. He's a classic example of how vital hand work is for edge rushers. He almost always initiates contact with a fantastic one-arm straight arm and it gives him a steady base to counter. He can feel if the blocker is getting off balance in any direction, or he can simply bull rush into the quarterback. -- CT

Amani Hooker S, IOWA

Height: 5-11, Weight: 210

Hooker loaded the stat sheet at Iowa, and on the field, it seemed to almost solely be due to brilliant football intelligence. He's a step ahead of everyone and aced his combined workout. Complete safety but can play nickel in Tennessee.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Instinctive, versatile safety who's a step ahead of everyone else on the field. While he mainly wins with his head and ball skills, Hooker proved to have quality athletic talents at the combine. - CT

Austin Bryant EDGE, CLEM

Height: 6-4, Weight: 271

Bryant's resume shows a super-productive defender, but he benefited from Clemson's other star linemen. He's strong with good length but really struggles to change direction and doesn't have pass-rushing plans.

C

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Bryant sets a sturdy edge but is more of a "SAM" linebacker than a pure edge rusher. He's a towering presence, doesn't play low, and is stiff around the corner. He doesn't have a pass-rush plan on most of his snaps on the outside. -- CT

Hjalte Froholdt OL, ARK

Height: 6-5, Weight: 306

This is such a classic Patriots pick. Underrated, experienced, high-caliber athlete in the trenches to add depth to the offensive line. Froholdt had an awesome game against Quinnen Williams and has outstanding feet. Length and lower-body strength are slight issues.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Athletically gifted interior line prospect. Dynamic mover in any direction with lots of upper body torque but could get more weight/strength to improve his anchor. Impressive combo blocker and very aware of stunts and capable of shutting them down. Underrated prospect. -- CT

Sheldrick Redwine S, MIAMI

Redwine checks the size and athleticism boxes for the safety spot but is more of a run stopper than a playmaker in coverage. He could emerge as a box defender for the Browns.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Redwine is a former cornerback, and skills he took from that position are obvious on film. He's explosive in a straight line and has plus ball skills. There's some stiffness when moving laterally, and he takes extra time to recognize route concepts. -- CT

Gary Jennings Jr. WR, WVU

Height: 6-1, Weight: 214

Jennings was a chain-mover in 2017 and erupted as a downfield specialist in 2018 for Will Grier. Good size and tremendous contested-catch skills yet there are some easy drops on film. Could be a better fit in the Doug Baldwin role for Seattle.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Jennings was Mr. Reliable for West Virginia from the slot and showed against Oklahoma and at the combine that he has enough speed to stretch the defense. He was outstandin in contested-catch situations in 2018. -- CT

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Benny Snell RB, UK

Height: 5-10, Weight: 224

Snell won't run away from linebackers and defensive backs at the NFL level, but he's so patient as a runner (sound like an ex-Steelers RB?), has plus contact balance, and deceptive springiness in his powerful frame.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Despite being a big runner, Snell has outstanding jump cut ability and is very patient behind his blockers. He's decently powerful too. Just lacks in the speed department. Hill is a modern-day air back with fluid hips and ankles. His vision fails him at times. -- CT

C

Phil Haynes OL, WAKE

Height: 6-4, Weight: 322

Haynes has an exceptional athlete for the guard spot and is incredibly aware of stunts and delayed blitzes. He plays with low pad level and plays the game very under control. The Seahawks get a good one for the line.

A-

Renell Wren DL, ARIZST

Height: 6-5, Weight: 318

Wren is a heavy, long-armed defensive lineman who can play anywhere up front. While he doesn't have many pass-rushing moves, he has an awesome first step for someone of his size and a devastatingly overpowering bull rush.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Wren is a versatile, long-limbed defender who wins with his length and first step. -- CT

Riley Ridley WR, UGA

Height: 6-1, Weight: 199

Ridley looks the part of a starting outside possession receiver, but he was never the go-to target at Georgia and is a stiff athlete. He flashed strong hands in traffic for the Bulldogs. Not a big need for the Bears, what about adding depth on defense?

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Ridley is clean out of his breaks, and he puts his foot in ground to create separation on curls/hitches. Is fluid in his movements and has the short-area athletic ability to win out over smaller DBs. Great high-point catcher and also solid route runner. But a 4.58 40 at the combine will likely see fall to Day 2. -- RW

2018 College Stats

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Iman Marshall CB, USC

Height: 6-1, Weight: 207

Marshall was a big-time recruit at USC and had a stable yet unspectacular four-year career for the Trojans. Long with good athleticism and adequate ball skills, he seems bound to be that type of reliable corner in the NFL.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Lewis-Marshall was a big recruit who had a solid albeit unspectacular career at USC. At good height with good length, he understands the nuances of playing the corner spot on the outside and will make quality plays on the football relatively often. He's a little more stiff than you'd expect for a former top recruit. -- CT

Tony Pollard RB, MEMP

Height: 6-0, Weight: 210

Pollard is a running back/receiver hybrid who needs to have his touches manufactured but plays with impressive explosiveness, and good, not great wiggle. Cowboys could have filled bigger needs with their third overall pick.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Gadget RB/WR hybrid with decent agility in space but his long speed is the most standout aspect of his game. Needs to be used in niche role or solely as ball-carrier to reach his potential at the NFL level. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Isaiah Johnson CB, HOU

Height: 6-2, Weight: 208

Johnson is how you'd create a cornerback in Madden. Tall, super-twitchy, long. But he's extremely raw staying with receivers in coverage and put some ugly tackling attempts on film. Moldable ball of clay.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Johnson is raw but will enter the NFL as a freaky size/speed/athleticism defensive back. -- CT

Drue Tranquill LB, ND

Tranquill is a modern-day linebacker who almost plays like a coverage-based safety. He tested through the roof at the combine. He's much further ahead in coverage than he is as a run stopper.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Tranquill has more build-up speed than explosiveness in his movements but is an experienced coverage linebacker who'll be useful at the pro level. He's not a reliable tackler however and maybe be a liability against the run. Coverage speciality is very intriguing. - CT

C+

Jarrett Stidham QB, AUBURN

Height: 6-2, Weight: 218

Stidham has a live arm and good athletic gifts. However, he really struggles under pressure, often leaving the pocket instead of stepping up, and his accuracy to all levels of the field is subpar. But never count the Pats out when it comes to QBs.

C

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Once the recipient of first-round buzz, Stidham fell off across the board in 2018. He's not very poised inside the pocket, and for every dime he drops down the field, there are two or three bad misfires on what should be easy completions. Stidham does have an NFL arm, and he can make good throws from many arm platforms. He needs to get faster through his reads. -- CT

B-

John Cominsky DL, UCWV

Height: 6-5, Weight: 286

Cominsky was a trendy small-school prospect during the pre-draft process and was blessed with stellar athletic talent and huge defensive end size. He doesn't have many pass-rushing moves and doesn't always play to his measured athleticism.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Cominsky is a tall, powerful athlete with outstanding size. Will his pass-rushing moves be impactful against NFL tackles? -- CT

Michael Jordan OL, OHIOST

Height: 6-6, Weight: 312

Jordan has experience at multiple positions but is slow-footed and stiff. His good combine was very surprising. He can flash explosive linear movements yet is raw in elements. The Bengals do need guard help, especially if Jonah Williams sticks at tackle.

D+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Played center in 2018 but has experience at guard too. Good size and impressively locks out as a pass protector. Light anchor on pass plays, and he's not explosive or under control enough to be an effective combo blocker. Turned 21 in January. -- CT

Foster Moreau TE, LSU

Height: 6-4, Weight: 253

Moreau was a blue-collar blocker at LSU in-line as a blocker or in space as an H-back. He displayed above-average separation skills and impressive yards after the catch as a receiver. He aced his combine workout too. Nice value here.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Moreau too can block at the second level, and he sets a quality edge. There's less athleticism to his game but flashes of good yards-after-the-catch skill and power. -- CT

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Shareef Miller EDGE, PSU

Miller is a somewhat polished pass rusher on the outside who understands he needs to use his hands to win but isn't powerful or athletic enough to win with much consistency around the corner.

C

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Good-sized defensive end with the girth and upper body strength to set a sturdy edge at the next level. Pass-rush moves are rarely deployed. Quicker than fast but not a twitchy athlete. Developmental run stopper with flashes of ability getting after the quarterback. -- CT

Deionte Thompson S, BAMA

Height: 6-1, Weight: 195

Thompson was expected to go much earlier, so great value here for the Cardinals. While not much of a playmaker for the Crimson Tide, he's long, explosive, and gets to his assignment quickly in coverage and against the run.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Elite athleticism and change of direction, great nose for the ball and able to quickly decipher routes. Long arms and long legs allow him to make plays on ball, even when patrolling centerfield. Explodes out of the secondary on swing pass to make tackles and feasts on one-read quaterbacks. Shows ability to play near the line of scrimmage and blitz off edge, but after a strong start to this 2018 season, had several average outings that could see him fall out of Round 1. -- RW

Ryquell Armstead RB, TEMPLE

Height: 5-11, Weight: 220

Armstead is a big, physical and at times dynamic ball-carrier who runs high but never stops churning his legs and flashed some wiggle to beat the initial defender at the line. The Jags need better depth behind Leonard Fournette.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Armstead is an authoritative back who gets to top speed quickly but doesn't have another gear in his arsenal to hit big-gainers. His feet are impressive at times. He's not that elusive in space, and despite his powerful running style, he doesn't bounce off many tackle attempts. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Zach Gentry TE, MICH

Height: 6-8, Weight: 265

Here's Pittsburgh's replacement for Jesse James. Gentry was the biggest tight end prospect in this class, has blocking chops coming from Michigan, and flashed, albeit not often at all, some seam-stretch ability as a receiver.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Gentry is a sleeper because of his time spent blocking in-line at Michigan and flashes of impressive speed and ball skills as a receiver. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Ben Burr-Kirven LB, WASH

Height: 6-0, Weight: 230

Burr-Kirven is an efficient block-shedder who flies around the field and gets to the ball in a hurry thanks to plus twitch and impressive speed. He stars in coverage too, breaking on the football almost instantaneously. Complete, modern-day linebacker.

A+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Burr-Kirven is a smaller linebacker, but in today's NFL, I'd much rather my linebackers be in the 220-pound range than in the 240-plus round range if they're around 6-foot. He's an awesome block-shedder and sifts through traffic across the field better than any linebacker in the class. He also has excellent coverage skills. -- CT

Ryan Connelly LB, WISC

Height: 6-2, Weight: 242

Connelly taps into his full potential athletically but sifting through traffic efficiently and using his hands to defeat blocks inside. He has good range and flashed good coverage skills at Wisconsin though it's not a specialty.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Tall, sizable linebacker with good spring in his step and a relatively refined game. Better flying around as a run-stuffer than in coverage but just might have enough athleticism to eventually be a three-down player at the next level. -- CT

Marvell Tell III S, USC

Height: 6-2, Weight: 198

Tell can look like a future All-Pro one game then a practice squad player the next. He's a tall, lanky, ridiculously explosive safety with an inconsistent motor and tackling willingness. Expect him to contribute on special teams out the gate.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Explosion and twitch based safety with cornerback skills. Tends to take some plays off and his production doesn't match his superb athletic traits. -- CT

D

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Amani Oruwariye CB, PSU

Oruwariye is a long versatile outside cornerback with smooth athleticism and springy plant-and-drive ability. Big fan of his ball skills too. Awesome value here for Detroit.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Oruwariye looks the part and he is a physical and fluid with smooth hips to get in and out of breaks. He has lockdown ability on outside and deep routes and can pay both press man and zone coverages. Struggled at times in the Senior Bowl but ran well at the combine and has the size (6-foot-1) and speed (4.47 40) NFL teams covet. A likely Day 2 pick. -- RW

Vosean Joseph LB, FLA

Height: 6-1, Weight: 230

When he's on his A game, Joseph can be as productive as any linebacker in this class because of his quick-twitch athleticism, speed, block-defeating skills, and awareness in coverage. Too often, he fails to wrap up as a tackler. Still, nice value this late.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Smooth athlete who's very fast to the football without having to play out of control at what looks like maximum speed and twitchiness is there when changing directions. Efficient block-shedder/avoider and has the fluidity and speed to run with smaller H-back type tight ends or chase crossers. Tackling reliability, instances of getting overwhelmed by blockers, and inconsistent motor are concerning, but altogether is an intriguing weakside linebacker prospect. -- CT

Hunter Renfrow WR, CLEM

Height: 5-10, Weight: 184

Renfrow has tiny hands and didn't test like an NFL-caliber receiver, but he destroyed the odds time and time again at Clemson, is a super-savvy route runner and has unfairly soft hands. Raiders have completely rebuilt the WR position this offseason.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Renfrow does not look like an NFL receiver nor does he appear to have standard NFL athleticism. But he catches everything -- everything! -- and will make defenders miss after the catch despite his athletic limitations. Amazing vision and feel for the slot position. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Kingsley Keke DL, TXAM

Height: 6-3, Weight: 288

Keke has adequate strength and can play anywhere on the defensive line but has limited pass-rushing moves and twitchiness. Likely just a sub-package player in Green Bay with the talent they already have up front.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Girthy, strong defensive end/defensive tackle hybrid who's been on the NFL radar for a while but didn't improve much throughout his collegiate career. Good inside move but doesn't have the explosiveness or hand work to be a threatening pass rusher at the NFL level. -- CT

Andrew Van Ginkel LB, WISC

Height: 6-3, Weight: 241

Van Ginkel is a fluid athlete with moments of impressive burst off the ball and a nice arsenal of pass-rushing moves. He just needs to spend a year in an NFL weight room to survive on the edge on Sundays.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Outside linebacker with experience sinking into zone coverage. Adores his inside move, and it's decently effective. Springy, somewhat explosive movements. Seriously lacking power in his hands. Toolsy, late-round pick who has a good chance of making a team as a rookie. -- CT

Qadree Ollison RB, PITT

Height: 6-1, Weight: 228

Ollison is a tall, powerful back who runs high and flashed the ability to make one cut and get down field in a hurry. Good fit in Atlanta's zone-blocking scheme, and good spot for Ollison after Tevin Coleman left in free agency.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Ollison is a tall, zone-blocking back with good one-cut ability for his size and above-average ankle flexion that allows him to hit those cutback lanes he sees. There's some power and contact balance to his game too but stiffness in his hips. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Ross Pierschbacher OL, BAMA

Height: 6-4, Weight: 307

Pierschbacher's value comes from his vast experience in the trenches and his versatility on the inside. He's an adequate run blocker but lacks the anchoring ability and athleticism to win regularly in pass protection. Redskins attacking offensive line on Day 3.

C

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Nothing about Pierschbacher's game stands out, but he's far from a liability and can play center or guard. Decent power, hand placement and punch timing. Better in a straight line and moving laterally although he can occasionally get across the line on zone plays. Doesn't have a mean streak and is further ahead as a run blocker than pass blocker. -- CT

Jordan Scarlett RB, FLA

Height: 5-11, Weight: 208

Scarlett has impeccable footwork and flexibility in his lower half to break off dazzling, multi-cut runs to leave defenders whiffing at air. The Panthers absolutely had to add help behind Christian McCaffrey and did it here.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Scarlett is bigger than Marcus Murphy was when he came into the league out of Missouri, but both backs can deploy awesome jump cuts and stop on a dime then instantly accelerate, making them nearly impossible to be contacted as they slide through the line of scrimmage and into the second and third levels of the defense. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Mack Wilson LB, BAMA

Height: 6-1, Weight: 240

Wilson looked like a future first-round linebacker from Alabama early in his career but actually regressed from that point. He doesn't play with much assertiveness, struggles to get off blocks, and isn't as impactful in coverage as his athleticism would indicate.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Much sleeker than the old iterations of the Alabama linebacker, yet he played with more assertiveness and authority in 2017 than 2018. Athleticism is there but speed is lacking, and he's not a true coverage linebacker. His block-shedding is adequate at its absolute best, all of which make him a raw, athletic linebacker. -- CT

Justin Hollins EDGE, OREG

Height: 6-5, Weight: 248

Hollins is a sleek, springy edge rusher with good pass-rush plans and the ability to flatten to the cornerback. Plenty of speed to his game, he just needs to add weight and strength at the next level. Nice depth piece for Denver.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Hollins needs to add around 10 pounds to his 6-5 frame. If he does that, we're talking about someone with double-digit sack potential. His speedy hands match his explosiveness off the snap, and he certainly can flatten the edge en route to the quarterback. -- CT

Blake Cashman LB, MINN

Height: 6-1, Weight: 237

Cashman isn't flashy. He's just always around the ball and knows how to beat blocks to get there against the run. He's a reliable zone coverage linebacker who reads routes quickly and reacts. Tested better than what he shows on the field but someone bound to outplay his draft position.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Cashman is very under control and steady. Almost always in the right place at the right time, and is a textbook, wrap-up tackler. He's aggressive as a blitzer and is smooth enough moving in any direction to be an asset in coverage. -- CT

Michael Jackson CB, MIAMI

Height: 6-1, Weight: 210

Jackson is a big, physically imposing outside corner who tested well at the combine but has trouble staying in phase with receivers down the field. His 2017 was much better than his 2018. Decent depth, has upside in Dallas if he can play up to his ceiling.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

For teams that want to maul receivers at the line, Jackson should be a mid-to-late round target. He's huge at well over 6-foot and 200 pounds with 32-plus inch arms. His press technique is solid too. His fluidity and feet are below starter standards. -- CT

Byron Cowart DL, MD

Height: 6-3, Weight: 298

Cowart was a highly sought after recruit who had a disappointing college career until his senior season at Maryland, when he flashed a bit because of his first step. He doesn't have pass-rushing moves and can get washed out against the run. Not sure he's worth a trade up.

D+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Cowart is a borderline freaky athlete who really only wins by exploding off the snap. -- CT

Daylon Mack DL, TXAM

Height: 6-1, Weight: 336

Mack is a bit of a throwback nose tackle, yet as a senior he really came on as a pass rusher. He's an ultra-strong, squatty defensive lineman who gets off blocks relatively well and boasts one of the best, most effective bull rushes in the class. Classic Ravens trench player.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Mack is a thick, talented mover for being 320-ish pounds. He has a stupidly strong bull rush and, as a senior, was freed from eating double teams at the nose tackle spot and flourished. Not a ton of pass rush from him, but he will push the pocket. -- CT

Charles Omenihu DL, TEXAS

Height: 6-5, Weight: 280

Omenihu was one of the biggest, longest defensive linemen in combine history, and after years spent eating blockers at Texas, he was freed in 2018 and demonstrated good pass-rushing moves. He can play, and succeed, on the inside too if need be. Great value pick.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Calls himself a "bigger version of Chandler Jones" Wins at the line of scrimmage with sheer strength, Omenihu can set the edge and requires double teams to move. He won't beat offensive linemen with his quickness or pass-rush moves, but wins with strength and tenacity. -- RW

Cameron Smith LB, USC

Height: 6-2, Weight: 238

Smith dropped weight before his senior season at USC in hopes of getting faster, and he did. He's good, not great shedding blocks and still a little stiff in coverage. Typically knows where to be and can quarterback the defense. Vikings needed better depth at the position.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Smith made the right choice by returning for his senior year and shedding weight. He's typically in good position, improved his coverage skills in 2018 but stays glued to blocks too often for how experienced he is. And he's still not an upper-level athlete for the position. -- CT

D+

EJ Speed LB, TRLST

Height: 6-3, Weight: 227

Speed is a tall, lanky linebacker with impressive athleticism who had a productive career but is a project mainly because he's making the gigantic jump from playing at Tarleton State to the NFL. Likely should have been a UDFA.

D+

Joe Jackson DL, MIAMI

Height: 6-4, Weight: 275

Jackson is a large, heavy-handed edge setter with slower-than-ideal feet but plenty of strength to his game. He doesn't bend the edge well but his hand use is effective. Great value for this late on Day 3.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Heavy, strength-based defensive end with flashes of bend and active hands but not someone with adequate change-of-direction ability. Projects best as a strongside edge setter. -- CT

Easton Stick QB, NDST

Height: 6-1, Weight: 224

Stick is my favorite small-school quarterback in this class. He zips through his reads, throws with good accuracy -- especially down the field -- and is an elusive scrambler. Worthwhile signal-caller to sit and learn behind Philip Rivers.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Stick is almost always perfectly balanced with feet and shoulders aligned when he throws the football. You can tell he's been well coached. His arm is Rypien-like, and he can occasionally turn into a runner too early inside the pocket, although he can step up and away from pressure in some instances. Impressive accuracy too. -- CT

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Clayton Thorson QB, NWEST

Height: 6-4, Weight: 222

Thorson had a big sophomore year and wasn't able to improve upon it statistically in 2017 or 2018, but he's big, has a live arm, knows how to move inside the pocket, and while he can force the football into precarious situations, he throws with good accuracy. Nick Foles replacement here.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Thorson checks a lot of traditional boxes. Size. Arm strength. Experience. His best plays are franchise-quarterback like. It's just that he's not consistent moving away from pressure, resetting, and unloading a rocket to his second read. His decision-making is questionable, and he should be more patient in the pocket for how experienced he is. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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D'Andre Walker EDGE, UGA

Height: 6-2, Weight: 251

Walker is a long, sculpted edge rusher who can stand up and sink into coverage on occasion. He's fast around the edge and was starting to show signs of effective pass-rushing moves at Georgia, but they still need to be developed. Good depth for Tennessee.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Shows great hand usage, which is critical because he's undersized. He can beat offensive tackles with his strength -- he gave Alabama's Jonah Williams one of his toughest tests of the season -- and can dominate tight ends assigned to block him. Walker shows a great motor and has the athleticism to drop into coverage. Can he add weight and still be effective? That's the question some NFL teams have. -- RW

David Edwards OL, WISC

Height: 6-6, Weight: 308

Edwards is a tall tackle with a classic Wisconsin game. He can move people in the run game but lunges and plays off balance often in pass protection. Might never be more than depth, but you need that in the NFL.

C

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Tall, decently athletic tackle who lacks lateral mobility and relies on his lean to generate power. Stays locked out, is susceptible to counter moves, and doesn't have the feet to consistently mirror high-end edge rushers. Effective combo blocker who's a swing tackle at the next level with starting upside. -- CT

Austin Seibert K, OKLA

Height: 5-9, Weight: 213

The Browns got better than expected production from Greg Joseph but clearly aren't satisfied with the position. The only reason this isn't a 'D' is because Seibert can contribute as a kicker and punter.

C-

Draft Prospect Outlook

No analysis available.

2018 College Stats

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Darius Slayton WR, AUBURN

Height: 6-1, Weight: 190

Slayton has good size and is one of the fastest receivers in this class. His hands are shaky at times. Get him the ball on screens and go routes, and he'll run by a lot of NFL players. The Giants clearly value YAC ability in the short passing game.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Slayton is a good-sized, well-built linear burner who can really sink his hips and explode up the field before flipping on his upper-level afterburners. -- CT

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Jordan Miller CB, WASH

Height: 6-1, Weight: 186

Kind of the forgotten man in Washington's talented secondary, Miller has great size and explosiveness, plus he works decently well in press and can make plays in zone. Ball skills are good, not great, and he plays stiff too often.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Outside corner with good height and arm length but low weight. Tends to dive into tackles instead of securing them with balanced base. Explosive athlete but has trouble following receivers. Best in zone. -- CT

Cole Holcomb LB, UNC

Height: 6-1, Weight: 225

Holcomb was the most productive linebacker on some bad North Carolina teams and plays with a non-stop motor. His play strength is solid and tiny flashes in coverage. Washington needed better depth inside at linebacker.

B-

KeeSean Johnson WR, FRESNO

Height: 6-1, Weight: 201

Johnson plays much faster and more fluidly than his combine effort would indicate. He glides in an out of his breaks and is decently efficient after the catch. The Cardinals have added a ton of talent at receiver in this draft.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Smooth glider down the field. Plays much faster and more athletic than his poor combine would indicate. Fluid and aware after the catch although he's not super elusive. Good, not great hands. Can flip on the jets in a hurry on screens. Deep sleeper. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Sutton Smith EDGE, NILL

Height: 6-0, Weight: 233

Smith will be one of the smallest edge rushers in the NFL, but don't be surprised if he plays off the ball in Pittsburgh. He has a wide array of devastating pass-rushing moves and can bend the edge tightly. He just doesn't have NFL-caliber length or strength.

C-

Kaden Smith TE, STNFRD

Height: 6-5, Weight: 255

Smith can be a little clunky with his movements and he's not particularly fast. But he's a huge target, and routinely showcased the strong hands needed to make difficult, contested-catches. Tight end not a huge need for 49ers, but Smith is a good talent.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Smith can line up in the slot and shows a good feel for the soft spots in zone coverage. A hands catcher in contested situations, Smith can high-point the ball in traffic and he can post up players in the middle of the field and win with his size advantage. Looks a little stiff coming out of his breaks and he'll be hurt by his slow 40 time at the combine (4.92).

2018 College Stats

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Saquan Hampton S, RUT

Height: 6-1, Weight: 206

Hampton is a tall, rangy safety who can play the slot well because of upper-level change-of-direction skills. He quick identifies play designs, which helps him get to the ball in a hurry. Solid ball skills too. The Saints needed to get multiple DBs in this draft.

B+

Gardner Minshew II QB, WASHST

Height: 6-1, Weight: 225

Minshew doesn't have an NFL arm but is well-versed getting through his reads and he's very accurate at the short portions of the field. He isn't poised under pressure and can't drive the ball accurately downfield. The retooling of the QB position in Jacksonville is complete.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Like most Mike Leach Air Raid quarterbacks, Minshew flies through his progressions and is willing to wait for someone to come open. His arm is severely lacking -- particularly when forced off his initial drop -- and his pocket management leaves a little to be desired. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Lamont Gaillard OL, UGA

Height: 6-3, Weight: 305

Gaillard is a super-experienced, compact power center with loose hips and vice grips for hands. He's an excellent combo blocker and despite not being the heaviest center, he anchors well in most instances. More weight is paramount for him in the NFL.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Gaillard is about as compact as they come at the center position, and his low center of gravity allows him to match the power of smaller, quicker defensive tackles. He really battles -- and moves people -- in the run game, especially when he can drive defenders downhill. The Georgia star is a good, not great athlete with decent length. -- CT

Corey Ballentine CB, WSHBRN

Height: 6-0, Weight: 204

From the small-school ranks, Ballentine was highly productive in college and has good, not great size. Hyper-twitch allows him to break up a lot of passes. That makes three solid corners for the Giants in this draft.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Twitchy, play-making slot corner and return man. Checks the speed, explosiveness, and change-of-direction boxes needed to play inside in NFL, and he has good awareness and route-recognition skills. -- CT

Jaquan Johnson S, MIAMI

Height: 5-10, Weight: 191

If Johnson were a few inches taller and had more weight on his frame, he probably would've gone on Day 2. He's a stellar run stopper because of his football IQ, twitch and speed, and he's almost always in ideal position in coverage. Can match up in the slot.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Johnson isn't a big guy but he can lay the wood. He's good in run support and a sure tackler. He explodes downhill but always under control. Johnson is undersized in coverage against tight ends and bigger receivers, and because of his size, he sometimes struggles to bring opponents down in their tracks. He lines up all over the field, but is primarily in centerfield. -- RW

Trayveon Williams RB, TXAM

Height: 5-8, Weight: 206

Williams has a small collection of high-end flashes as a slashing back in college. He lacks the foot quickness, burst, and sustained long speed to make a major impact at the next level. The Bengals needed to add at RB after cutting ties with Mark Walton.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Sees hole, hits hole -- a one-cut runner who doesn't dance around in the backfield. Not a goal-line back, and doesn't regularly break first tackle, Williams is undersized as a blocker but proficient at chip-blocking and he understands protections. He can line up outside, shows good hands as a receiver. -- RW

C-

Travis Fulgham WR, ODU

Height: 6-2, Weight: 215

Fulgham is an angular downfield threat who can run his routes a little high which hurts his change-of-direction skills. He has good, strong hands in contested-catch situations. The opportunity will be there to stick in Detroit with depth lacking at receiver.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

A long strider, he can play outside or as "big slot." Has the ability to make adjustments and go up and get the ball downfield. He uses his body to shield defenders and when he gets two hands on the ball it's over. -- RW

2018 College Stats

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Ka'dar Hollman CB, TOLEDO

Height: 6-0, Weight: 190

Hollman looks the part of an NFL outside cornerback and has good twitch when moving in a straight line. He's best in zone but needs to improve his tackling and mirroring abilities. Packers get a fast corner late in the draft.

C

Ty Johnson RB, MD

Height: 5-10, Weight: 208

Johnson is one of the deepest sleeper running backs in this class because of his freakish speed once he finds space. He has decent contact balance and adequate agility. The Lions suddenly have a lot of options at RB.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

No analysis available.

2018 College Stats

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Juwann Winfree WR, COLO

Height: 6-3, Weight: 215

Winfree is a big bodied, lanky-ish receiver who lacked production at Colorado and is a solid blocker. Didn't see many looks in college, but the Broncos obviously see something in the local product with the trade up.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

No analysis available.

2018 College Stats

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David Long Jr. LB, WVU

Height: 5-11, Weight: 227

Long plays out of control, and while that hair-on-fire styles leads to missed tackles, it also places him near the football frequently. He's a little undersized and better against the run than in coverage. Should stand out on special teams immediately.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Long can mirror running backs as well as any linebacker in the class. In fact, he has a running back body. I'm concerned with his tackling radius at under 6-foot with short arms. -- CT

B-

Armon Watts DL, ARK

Height: 6-5, Weight: 300

Watts is a modern day nickel inside rusher with active, efficient hand work. He needs to get stronger to hold up against the run, but his pass-rushing prowess could get him on the field earlier than expected, especially considering Minnesota's lack of depth.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Watts is a new-age inside rusher who'll face problems against big, powerful guards but will also glide past some of them with his long arms and light feet. -- CT

Marcus Epps S, WYO

Height: 6-0, Weight: 197

Epps spent time at corner and safety at Wyoming and loaded the stat sheet. He has good, NFL-caliber size and decent speed downfield. Epps was expected to be a UDFA but turned a strong pro day into a spot in the sixth round.

B

Isaiah Buggs DL, BAMA

Height: 6-3, Weight: 306

Buggs is a heavy end who can play defensive tackle in a pinch but is very slow and sluggish in his movements. He can win with power at times. The Steelers keep adding depth to the front seven in Round 6.

C-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Tall, power end who'd fit best as a five technique two-gapping in a 3-4 base. Sturdy edge setter who lacks bend and twitch but in rare occasions can push tackles into the quarterback. - CT

Olisaemeka Udoh OL, ELON

Height: 6-5, Weight: 323

Udoh is a super-long, athletic developmental tackle with decent movement skills when moving to the second level. He could develop into an option on the right side at tackle for a Minnesota team looking to upgrade the O-line.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Tall, super long, and athletic, Udoh needs more pop on contact. If he's able to add weight at the NFL level without sacrificing his athleticism, he can be an awesome value find later in the draft. -- CT

Dexter Williams RB, ND

Height: 5-11, Weight: 212

Williams is a bigger back but plays like he's a smaller slasher. He doesn't have a lot of tread on his tires and has deceptive acceleration once he finds open space. He could carve out a role eventually in Green Bay.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

His size makes him a liability as a blocker. He hits the hole when it's there but not explosive like David Montgomery or Josh Jacobs. Also doesn't break a lot of tackles near the line of scrimmage. Shows patience to wait for holes to develop and while he has a jump-cut, it's not at the level of the best backs in this class. -- RW

C-

Blessuan Austin CB, RUT

Height: 6-1, Weight: 198

Austin battled myriad injuries at Rutgers, which is probably why he sank to the sixth round. He has impressive size, twitch, and awareness when the ball arrives. Great value on a guy who could stick long-term in the league.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Coming off an early season-ending injury in 2018. Will hit most team's size and length thresholds but needs to add weight. Light on his feet and flashed impressive ball disruption skills way back in 2016. Late=round flier potential. -- CT

Trace McSorley QB, PSU

Height: 6-0, Weight: 202

McSorley doesn't have the passing ability to be a successful NFL quarterback but is a fine athlete, so he's logical depth behind Lamar Jackson. It's possible the Ravens have a role in mind for him in their run-heavy offense.

C-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

The strong-armed quarterback was responsible for a lot of Penn State's success in 2018, but he's undersized and struggles with accuracy, which is why some NFL teams asked him to work out at defensive back at the combine (he ran a 4.57); McSorley declined. His best chance to make it at the next level may be at another position but he may not be willing to make the switch. -- RW

2018 College Stats

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INT

Tim Harris CB, UVA

Height: 6-2, Weight: 205

Harris crushed his pro day workout, and is another prospect who likely landed this late in the draft because of a lengthy injury history. His speed and size combination are what likely got him drafted.

B-

Gerri Green EDGE, MISSST

Height: 6-4, Weight: 252

Green represents what's become normal for Mississippi State defenders. He's ultra-physical and never stops moving. He's not a great athlete for the edge rusher spot and lacks a variety of pass-rushing moves.

C

Emeke Egbule LB, HOU

Height: 6-2, Weight: 245

Egbule is a fun hybrid linebacker with plenty of explosiveness to his game but minimal bend around the corner and raw overall game. We saw with the Chargers last year they need all the talent they can get at the linebacker position.

B

Rashad Fenton CB, SC

Height: 5-11, Weight: 193

Fenton doesn't have a standout trait but is probably best in a zone-based scheme that lets him attack. Corner was likely the Chiefs' biggest need coming into the draft, but Fenton will likely need time to develop.

C-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Outside corner lacking in the size and length departments. Good speed. Click-and-close ability is a little below average, as is his fluidity when changing directions. Best attribute is his ball skills downfield. Deep depth in the secondary. -- CT

Isaiah Prince OL, OHIOST

Height: 6-6, Weight: 305

Prince has experience at multiple positions and proved to be a top-flight linear athlete for the tackle position at the combine. He has long arms and loads of experience but also weak grip strength and minimal lateral movement skills. He could have a role in Miami.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Tall, long, linearly athletic tackle who understand his length and springness are his best friends on the outside. Too often gets overextended with his arms which leads to susceptibility against counters. Good strenght but seriously lacks lateral mobility. -- CT

C-

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Travis Homer RB, MIAMI

Height: 5-10, Weight: 201

Homer is a good-sized slasher who's capable of breaking off multiple cuts to free himself down the field and is dangerous in the screen game. He also has deceptive speed downfield. The Seahawks love adding talent at running back position year in and year out.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Homer is a natural running back who always seems to find the intended lane quickly, and he has surprising burst and speed for being a compact runner. His cuts are more fluid than they are jagged. Like Kerryon Johnson, he plays bigger than his size because of his explosiveness and powerful leg churn through contact. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Duke Shelley CB, KSTATE

Height: 5-9, Weight: 180

Shelley is slot corner-sized but played on the outside often at Kansas State and was super disruptive thanks to awesome twitchiness and awareness. His plant-and-drive ability is excellent and he has good downfield speed. The Bears finally add defensive help.

A-

Kelvin Harmon WR, NCST

Height: 6-2, Weight: 221

How was Harmon still available in the sixth round? Could've been his subpar combine. He was a consistent, chain-mover for NC State over the past two seasons, has super-strong hands, and knows how to use his big frame to box out cornerbacks. A sixth-rounder with potential.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Capable of running every route, size, speed and physicality make him tough to tackle after the catch. His 40 time (4.60) will affect his draft stock but it shouldn't; he's a first-round talent. Harmon effortlessly gets in and out of breaks and routinely makes tough, contested catches that will make him invaluable at the next level. -- RW

C

Scott Miller WR, BGREEN

Height: 5-11, Weight: 166

Miller is a diminutive slot wideout who was highly productive in the MAC. He'll need to prove himself against press to last in the NFL, but heseems to be a good fit in the slot as the Bucs look to replace Adam Humphries.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

No analysis available.

2018 College Stats

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Demarcus Christmas DL, FSU

Height: 6-3, Weight: 294

Christmas is noticeably powerful on the inside but is not much more than a solid two-down run plugger. Still, guys like that have a role at the NFL level, and the Seahawks needed some depth at the position.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Bulky, run-stupping specialist ready to go toe-to-toe with guards and centers at the next level. Decent disengaging from blocks. Not particular explosive and doesn't have a develop arsenal of pass-rushing moves. -- CT

Deshaun Davis LB, AUBURN

Height: 5-11, Weight: 234

Davis is a high-motor linebacker who can be a thumping run-stopper but doesn't have the athleticism or speed to stay on the field on third downs. The Bengals had to add talent at linebacker in the draft and did so with Germaine Pratt and now Davis.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Davis is an old-school thumper. He's stout against run, sifts through trash to plug holes, and regularly stops ball carrier in tracks. He also times blitzes well but his coverage ability is limited by stiff hips and average change of direction. NFL teams still need two-down linebackers and Davis will likely have to make a team on special teams first. -- RW

Rodney Anderson RB, OKLA

Height: 6-0, Weight: 224

The Bengals make it two RBs in Round 6 as they look to build their depth there. Anderson is coming off an injury. He's a bigger back with a flowing, slashing style and plenty of impressive receptions on film in 2017.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Anderson is a smooth, one-cut runner who glides across the field at over 6-0 and 224 pounds. He's heftier than DeAngelo Williams was as a prospect, but like Williams, Anderson can squeeze through small creases between the tackles and has impressive downfield speed once he gets into space. -- CT

Donovan Wilson S, TXAM

Height: 6-0, Weight: 199

Wilson is a tone-setting box safety who has issues changing directions or attacking in zone. In coverage, he's best when he can get physical with tight ends at the line. The Cowboys finally address one of their biggest needs late in the draft.

C+

Darwin Thompson RB, UTAHST

Height: 5-8, Weight: 190

Thompson only had one year at Utah State and was an explosive, game-breaking air back on outside runs and screens. He's a tiny runner with thick, powerful legs and decent contact balance. The opportunity could be there in Kansas City.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Thompson looks like one of the smallest backs of this class and has Love-like explosiveness. He's just not nearly as impressive of a make-you-miss back as you'd expect for his size. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Terry Beckner, Jr. DL, MIZZOU

Height: 6-4, Weight: 296

A poor combine likely hurt Beckner's stock. At Missouri, he demonstrated powerful hands and explosive linear bursts to sneak into the backfield. He can be complacent at times as a rusher and play too upright. Still, great value here for Tampa Bay.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Beckner is a refined block-disengager with good burst who has trouble sustaining speed through the play. -- CT

Nick Allegretti OL, ILL

Height: 6-4, Weight: 310

Allegretti's versatility and football intelligence likely led to him being drafted. He lacks NFL-caliber physical abilities and refinement as a blocker, but the Chiefs obviously saw him enough to give him a shot at competing inside.

C-

Kris Boyd CB, TEXAS

Height: 5-11, Weight: 201

Boyd is a feisty outside cornerback with enough quick-twitch movement skills to move down into the slot. He knows when the ball is arriving and attacks. He had a strong combine. The Vikings have a great track record drafting corners.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

A physical player who can sometimes get in trouble when he's out of position, drawing defensive pass interference penalties. Boyd ran an impressive 4.45 40 at the combine though questions about his flexibility could see him slip down draft boards. -- RW

Mike Weber RB, OHIOST

Height: 5-10, Weight: 211

Weber has 'Ohio State speed' and while he never secured lead back duties in Columbus he made the most of his touches thanks to that speed and good balance through contact. A more traditional backup for Ezekiel Elliott than earlier pick Tony Pollard.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Weber has a smaller-scat back body and flashes springiness in his step to bounce to the outside where he can exhibit decent speed and a well-timed stiff arm on occasion. He misses holes due to below-average vision. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Derwin Gray OL, MD

Height: 6-4, Weight: 320

Gray had a strangely bad combine because he moves very well for his large size on the field. While not always the prettiest in pass protection, Gray consistently gets in done and is under control but quick in space and can find linebackers at the second level.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Gray is somewhat sluggish in his movements but just athletic enough to get the job done as a pass protector. Like Donovan Smith, Gray's girth and length really help to mask athletic deficiencies. Better on pass plays than paving lanes for the run, Gray has a chance to land in the middle of the draft and start at left tackle early in his career. -- CT

A-

Kerrith Whyte, Jr. RB, FAU

Height: 5-10, Weight: 200

Whyte is a home-run hitter with major speed down the field and the ability to brush off weak tackle attempts at the second level. The Bears made running back a priority with their first pick, but they come back with more depth at the position here.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

No analysis available.

2018 College Stats

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Jordan Brown CB, SDST

Height: 6-0, Weight: 201

Brown has great size for the position, can really run and loaded the stat sheet in the pass breakup department at South Dakota State. His change of direction skills will be tested in the pros, but this could be a steal for Cincinnati.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Brown is a bigger, sleek outside cornerback who can really run but plays relaxed a bit too often. Need to see more plant-and-drive explosiveness from him. -- CT

Isaac Nauta TE, UGA

Height: 6-3, Weight: 244

The Lions started the draft with a tight end and add a depth option late. Nauta never lived up to hype as a big-time recruit and had a poor pre-draft process at the combine and his pro day. He flashed in rare instances as a receiver in some big games at Georgia.

C

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Nauta was a big recruit but failed to live up to expectations at Georgia. I don't think he's a liability in any area. I didn't see anything close to resembling a trump card to his game, although he can explode off the line as a receiver. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Darryl Johnson, Jr. EDGE, NCAT

Height: 6-6, Weight: 253

Johnson was one of my favorite small-school edge rushers because of his length, springiness, and most importantly, his collection of pass-rushing moves. Good bend too. At 6-foot-6 and 253 pounds, he has some room to grow into his frame and must get stronger.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Johnson, a super-sleeper from North Carolina A&T, is tall and slender with high-end explosiveness and somewhat frequent snaps demonstrating stellar pass-rushing moves but very limited power. He's a situational guy early in his career as he builds mass in the weight room. -- CT

Ty Summers LB, TCU

Height: 6-1, Weight: 241

Summers makes explosive moves all over the field, when flashing to make a tackle on an outside run play or when breaking on out route. His tackling leaves a lot to be desired but with a more methodical approach, Summers can be a steal because of his athleticism.

B+

Jimmy Moreland CB, JMAD

Height: 5-10, Weight: 179

Moreland plays larger than his size and is a twitchy, playmaker who was always making big plays at the small-school level. Don't be surprised when he makes the team and contributes early. Washington continues to have a great draft.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Get Moreland on the field as your nickel corner. He's an assertive, twitchy play-maker who seemingly always finds the football in the air. Loose hips and quick feet. -- CT

Tommy Sweeney TE, BC

Height: 6-4, Weight: 251

Sweeney is a jack of all trades but a master of none. No standout portion of his game. He has experience in-line as a blocker but didn't improve in that area as his college career progressed. Adequate receiver in the short to intermediate area.

C+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Adequate in all phases of the game. Spectacular in none. Experience in-line as a blocker and solid in that area. Reliable pass-catcher who's a big target but not a true seam-stretcher or YAC tight end. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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PJ Johnson DL, ARIZ

Height: 6-3, Weight: 335

Johnson is an enormous defensive lineman who's best in run-stopping situations and can overwhelm with his power. He could have trouble finding playing time with the solid group Detroit already has in place.

B

Quinton Bell DE, PRARIE

Height: 6-4, Weight: 220

Bell made one of the strangest position conversions you'll ever see in college, going from wide receiver to defensive end. It's certainly a long-term project for the Raiders. Figure on him showing up on special teams.

D

Alize Mack TE, ND

Mack is a large target at tight end who proved to have explosive athleticism at the combine. He leaves a little to be desired in terms of separation and yards after the catch.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Looks like an NFL tight end but he's only adequate as a blocker and can be overwhelmed when blocking inline. Mack is a hands catcher with ability to pluck ball out of the air but also disappeared for long stretches with little/no impact during games last season. Smooth getting in and out of breaks. Has no problem creating separation, especially against LBs, but often goes down at first contact. -- RW

2018 College Stats

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George Asafo-Adjei OL, UK

Height: 6-5, Weight: 315

Battled tested in the SEC, this Kentucky blocker has swing tackle written all over him. He isn't a plus athlete but battles hard on every snap. The Giants certainly could use him turning into an option on the right side.

D+

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Myles Gaskin RB, WASH

Height: 5-9, Weight: 205

Gaskin was a major overachiever his entire college career at Washington and is a crafty, smooth runner who runs with awesome balance and subtle but efficient wiggle. He could have a chance at sticking in Miami.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Small but blessed with lightning quick reaction to what's in front of him and good burst and wiggle, Justin Forsett stuck around the NFL for nine seasons. Gaskin is comparably sized and talented. He repeatedly finds creases you don't think are there and the next thing you know, he's at 100 yards for the game. I can see him having a long stint in the NFL. -- CT

John Ursua WR, HAWAII

Height: 5-10, Weight: 175

Ursua is a fun slot receiver with a lot of production on his resume. He's an older prospect who could struggle beating press at the line in the pros, but the Seahawks saw enough to give up a 2020 pick to get him.

GP

REC

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TDS

Stephen Denmark CB, VALDST

Height: 6-4, Weight: 216

This is the perfect time of the draft to take a prospect like Denmark. At around 6-foot-4 and 220 pounds, he's an explosive defensive back who lacks mirroring skills or quick processing ability in zone.

A-

Dillon Mitchell WR, OREG

Height: 6-1, Weight: 197

Mitchell was Justin Herbert's go-to target in 2018, and he ran under 4.50 at the combine. He tracks the ball awesome downfield and is very elusive after the catch. The Vikings may have found yet another overlooked weapon at receiver.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

As everyone turned their attention to Oregon quarterback Justin Herbert in 2018, Mitchell was clearly his go-to target in every game, finishing the year with 75 receptions for over 1,100 yards with 11 touchdowns. He flashed in every way possible: down the field, in space on underneath routes, and near the sidelines as a chain-mover. He's an ultra-flexible wideout with high-level juking ability to beat press at the line or leave defenders whiffing in the open field. -- CT

2018 College Stats

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Jackson Barton OL, UTAH

Height: 6-7, Weight: 310

Barton isn't a stellar athlete but he's one of the most under control tackle in this class, and he has serious NFL tackle size. Plus ability as a pass blocker. He has the profile of someone you want to gamble on in the seventh round.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

At 6-foot-7 with 34-inch arms, Barton has NFL tackle size and length. His pass-blocking skills are above-average, as he's quick in his kick slide and patient with his punch. Needs to add weight and improve his leg churn and accuracy as a run blocker. Swing tackle material with outside chance to start eventually. -- CT

Jalen Jelks EDGE, OREG

Height: 6-5, Weight: 256

Jelks is a tall, sleek defensive line tweener seriously lacking power. He must be given the opportunity to attack, and he has an effective inside move. With Demarcus Lawrence extended, the Cowboys can afford to use Jelks in small doses.

B

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Jelks is a tweener who produced well on the inside but doesn't have the frame for it in the NFL. As a senior, he played on the edge more often, and while he's a twitchy athlete, he's not exactly bendy around the corner. His inside move is tremendous and will help him collapse the pocket in the pros. -- CT

Cortez Broughton DL, CINCY

Height: 6-2, Weight: 293

Finally given the opportunity to rush inside at defensive tackle as a senior, Broughton had 18 tackles for loss thanks to a lightning quick first step and low center of gravity power. He's a plus athlete for the position and has loose hips after time spent on the edge early in his college career.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Broughton is a big draft sleeper with amazing burst off the ball, high-end speed-to-power conversion, and fluid hips. He played out of position on the edge in 2017 but erupted with 18.5 tackles for loss and seven sacks on the inside in 2018. -- CT

Nick Scott S, PSU

Height: 5-11, Weight: 202

Scott doesn't have great size for the safety spot, but after sitting behind some talented defensive backs, he was a reliable contributor to Penn State's run-stopping efforts and made some plays in coverage.

C

Kaden Elliss LB, IDAHO

Height: 6-3, Weight: 240

Elliss jumped onto the draft radar with a ridiculous pro day. He was very productive at Idaho from his off-ball linebacker spot and at times played close to the line as a SAM linebacker. The Saints finally add some depth at linebacker in this draft.

B+

Chris Slayton DL, CUSE

Slayton is a high-motor, heavy-handed defensive tackle who can throttle offensive guards backward but lacks athleticism and pass-rushing moves.

B-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Active, one-gap defensive tackle with good hand work who needs to get more powerful with them to succeed in the NFL. High motor will make him a favorite with his defensive coordinator. Athleticism is not up to starting NFL standards. -- CT

Javon Patterson OL, MISS

Height: 6-3, Weight: 307

Patterson was an unspectacular yet solid guard at Ole Miss for multiple seasons. He doesn't have ideal length and must pack some weight onto his frame, but he's the type of guy that can emerge with the right coaching.

B+

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Great lateral movement for his size. Loose hips. Needs to get more powerful in his anchor. Initiates contact but is mostly under control. Not much of a waist-bender. -- CT

Olabisi Johnson WR, COLOST

Height: 6-0, Weight: 204

Johnson was a consistent possession receiver at Colorado State and had a stellar but overlooked combine. but it'll be difficult to stand out. I'm not sure the Vikings needed to take two Round 7 receivers in this draft.

C

Draft Prospect Outlook

No analysis available.

2018 College Stats

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Joshua Miles OL, MRGNST

Height: 6-5, Weight: 314

One of the most linearly explosive small-school tackles in this class. His great size and immense length make him an ideal project up front, and the Cardinals need to develop some long-term answers on the offensive line.

B-

Michael Dogbe DL, TEMPLE

Height: 6-3, Weight: 275

While his film is inconsistent, when he's on, Dogbe can be unstoppable because of his burst and strong hands he uses well. This is a great find for the Cardinals at the end of the draft, and I like his chances of making the team.

A-

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Dogbe is an roller-coaster of a player. On one series, he's unblockable thanks to a strong punch and counter or a lightning quick first step. The next series, his motor idles, and he's stuck to every blocker that touches him. -- CT

Austin Cutting LS, AF

Height: 6-3, Weight: 245

If I don't advocate drafting punters, I definitely don't advocate drafting long snappers. This is a guy the team could have more than likely picked up as an undrafted free agent, but when you trade back as many times as the Vikings did, you have to use the picks on someone.

D+

Dakota Allen LB, TXTECH

Height: 6-1, Weight: 232

Allen isn't very fast but he's ultra-quick and has plenty of experience roaming in space in the Big 12. He reads the direction of the offensive play quickly, gets to the football in a hurry against the run, and has the skill set to become a solid zone coverage defender.

A

Draft Prospect Outlook

Draft Scouting Report:

Allen doesn't waste any time or movements en route to the football. He's comfortable playing in space coming from Texas Tech. -- CT

Ken Webster CB, MISS

Height: 5-11, Weight: 203

Webster battled injuries at Ole Miss yet recovered remarkably to put on a show at the combine. He has outside corner and safety versatility and has great size. A nice sleeper for the Patriots at the end of the draft.